• Hours & Info

    (562) 495-0554
    M-F: 8:00am - 6:00 p.m.
    Sat: 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
  • Past Blog Posts

  • https://api.whatsapp.com/send?phone=13104885414

A crime involving moral turpitude

Assault with a deadly weapon or force likely to produce great bodily injury under California law is categorically a crime involving moral turpitude. Ceron v. Holder, 747 F.3d 773 (9th Cir. 2014) (en banc), distinguished

Assault found not to be a CMT

Crime involving Moral turpitude

Crimes of Moral turpitude

Old crime waiver

The Ninth Circuit reversed, holding that if ICE detains an immigrant pending potential criminal prosecution, then that detention constitutes “official detention” within the meaning of 18 USC §3585(b), and the immigrant is accordingly entitled to credit toward his or her criminal sentence. The court also held that an immigrant is entitled to credit for all time spent in ICE detention subsequent to his or her indictment or the filing of formal criminal charges against him or her.

Types of crime

Find a criminal attorney

Criminal charges

The criminal waiver

Post Conviction Relief granted.  Lawful Permanent Resident went from having an Aggravated Felony drug conviction to a conviction that is neither an Aggravated Felony or Crime Involving Moral Turpitude.  Client can now apply to renew his Green Card and apply for Naturalization/Citizenship without the fear of deportation.

Criminal relief and what is a conviction

Criminal attorney

Alien criminal

Criminal waiver

Criminal and Other Conduct Affecting Discretionary Cases in Immigration Court

Criminal and Other Conduct Affecting Discretionary Cases in Immigration Court – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/NgrMr

Discretionary waiver authority

Criminal

Discretionary waiver authority

Immigration reform update gives hope to millions even with criminal history

Crimes of Moral Turpitude

Crimes of Moral Turpitude in Removal or Deportation Hearings – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/RJP7H

The generic definition 

Crimes: charges 

Criminal and another conduct 

A person with crimes 

Particular Types of Crimes of Moral Turpitude in Deportation or Removal Hearings

Particular Types of Crimes of Moral Turpitude in Deportation or Removal Hearings – Avvo.com http://ping.fm/hzcVl

Crimes in immigration 

How one analyzes crimes in immigration 

Moral turpitude 

Juvenile crimes 

What to do before you plea guilty to a Crime?

What to do before you plea guilty to a Crime

Reports of crime

Making a Plea of Guilty to a crime

Crimes affecting immigration

Victim of a crime?

Another immigration case

Another immigration case re: persons who initially were not eligible to receive Green Cards:
U.S. SUPREME COURT

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
Michigan Supreme Court ruling that state trial judge did not abuse broad discretion by granting mistrial, to which defendant did not object, on the second day of deliberations and after foreperson had answered “no” to judge’s question as to whether jurors would be able to reach a unanimous verdict was not an unreasonable application of U.S. Supreme Court precedent barring retrial under the Double Jeopardy Clause in the absence of “manifest necessity” for mistrial. The more general the ruling of the state court, the greater is the deference owed under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act’s “unreasonable application” standard. U.S. Supreme Court precedent does not require trial judge, before declaring a mistrial based on jury deadlock, to force jury to deliberate for a minimum period of time, to question jurors individually, to consult with (or obtain the consent of) either the prosecutor or defense counsel, to issue a supplemental jury instruction, or to consider any other means of breaking the impasse.
Renico v. Lett – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 09-338
Full text http://ping.fm/bHxf0

-Individual Rights-
42 U.S.C. Sec. 233(a), which provides that the remedy provided by the Federal Tort Claims Act is “exclusive of any other civil action or proceeding” for any personal injury caused by a Public Health Service officer or employee performing a medical or related function “while acting within the scope of his office or employment,” precludes an action under Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.S. 388 (1971) against PHS personnel for constitutional violations arising out of their official duties.
Hui v. Castaneda – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 08-1529
Full text http://ping.fm/Ar2Xf

NINTH U.S. CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS

-Civil Procedure-
A prevailing defendant in a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case cannot be awarded costs without a finding that plaintiff brought the action in bad faith and for the purpose of harassment.
Rouse v. Law Offices of Rory Clark – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 09-55146
Full text http://ping.fm/1xbcb

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
A conviction under a statute proscribing grossly negligent conduct, even though it involves an intentional and potentially dangerous act, is not a crime of violence within the meaning of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. Violation of California Penal Code Sec. 246.3 for discharging a firearm in a grossly negligent manner is not a crime of violence.
United States v. Coronado – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 09-50154
Full text http://ping.fm/CsAYr

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
Preconviction order providing for appointment of a receiver to take from defendant property he fraudulently obtained from investors and restore that property to them was not affected on abatement of defendant’s conviction due to his death since repayment was not conditioned on defendant’s conviction. However, defendant’s estate could not be held liable for satisfying terms of postconviction restitution order.
United States v. Rich – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 08-30153
Full text http://ping.fm/yIpqz

-Criminal Law and Procedure-
Where district court did not lead defendant to believe that he would receive substantial assistance with his case from standby counsel, and defendant rejected court’s opportunities to withdraw waiver after defendant complained that assistance was not substantial, defendant’s waiver of right to counsel was knowing and intelligent. Defendant’s argument of ineffective assistance of counsel was not sufficiently developed to allow determination whether prejudice resulted where attorney was not given chance to explain conduct, and government was not allowed opportunity to counter defendant’s purported mental health defense. District court did not abuse its discretion in granting two-week continuance after defendant requested representation by counsel where need for continuance was defendant’s fault and defendant had objected to any continuance. Prosecution committed misconduct where it questioned defendant about veracity of two government witnesses during cross-examination, but questioning was not plain error because credibility of witnesses was not paramount in trial, and questioning did not prejudice defendant’s substantial rights or diminish integrity of judicial proceedings. Prosecution’s references to defendant as a “liar” during closing arguments was not misconduct where statements were reasonably based on demonstrated inconsistencies in evidence, statements did not affect defendant’s substantial rights where government presented strong independent evidence that defendant knowingly engaged in massive fraud, and court instructed jury that argument was not evidence. Prosecution did not misstate law by telling jury that “case is over” if it found defendant not credible where prosecutor spent substantial time reviewing legal elements of charges and discussing facts jury needed to find to convict. Where defendant was charged with promotion of money laundering under 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1956(a)(2)(B), district court’s failure to instruct the jury that “proceeds” must be profits constituted plain error affecting defendant’s substantial rights. Failure to so instruct on charges under Sec. 1956(a)(2)(A) was not error because statute requires only a showing of proceeds. Where defendant was charged under Sec. 1956(h) for conspiracy to commit money laundering, jury instructions stating that they could find defendant guilty if “there was an agreement between two or more persons to commit money laundering” were error because they did not define money laundering, but error was harmless where defendant would have been convicted had correct instructions been given. Defendant’s convictions of concealment of money laundering involving foreign transfers and conspiracy to commit money laundering were supported by sufficient evidence where defendant created and controlled company that made one of underlying transfers, and where government demonstrated overwhelmingly that defendant was part of conspiracy that made other underlying transfers, that the offenses were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy, and that the actions providing the basis for substantive charges were reasonably foreseeable to defendant. District court’s imposition of $36 million restitution order on remand for resentencing after passage of 90-day limit in Sec. 3664(d)(5) of Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, after having deferred issue pending a determination of identities of victims and amounts of losses, did not prejudice defendant because act’s limits are procedural, not jurisdictional; act provides for revision in light of later discoveries of losses; and act was intended to protect victims, not victimizers.
United States v. Moreland – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 05-30541
Full text http://ping.fm/Wm94g

-Immigration Law-
Immigration judge denied petitioner a full and fair hearing where judge unreasonably limited testimony on whether removal “would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” to petitioner’s 4-year-old U.S.-citizen child and denied request for a continuance, prejudicing petitioner’s ability to present evidence in support of her application for cancellation of removal.
Rendon v. Holder – filed December 2, 2009, amended May 3, 2010
Cite as 06-70301
Full text http://ping.fm/zlDRI

-Immigration Law-
Government proved aliens’ removability by clear and convincing evidence by linking aliens to criminal conspiracy by a former Immigration and Naturalization Service agent through circumstantial evidence. Because aliens were improperly granted green cards, their legal permanent resident status was void ab initio and conferred no rights. Aliens lacked standing to pursue equal protection claim since they did not belong to class of returning LPRs who were allegedly similarly situated to applicants for admission.
Kim v. Holder – filed May 3, 2010
Cite as 06-73415

Crimes and Immigration

Criminal lawyer

Immigration Lawyer near me

How long will my case take?

 

 

 

 

Criminal Attorney must give consequences of deportation possibilities before Guilty Plea

Criminal Attorney must give consequences of deportation possibilities before Guilty Plea
Posted on April 7, 2010 by Brian D. Lerner | Edit
Rate This

Quantcast

Criminal Attorney must give consequences of deportation possibilities before Guilty Plea

Up until now, an Immigration Attorney would have a very difficult time trying to get post conviction relief for a criminal alien who plead guilty to some crime, was ordered deported and whereby the Immigration Attorney would try to get post conviction relief to give the foreign national an opportunity to try to beat the deportation. Almost always, the Criminal Courts would claim that immigration consequences are collateral to the main guilty plea, and because of that, whether they knew or not, a person could make a guilty plea and it would be knowingly even though they were not given proper advice by the criminal attorney, or no advice at all regarding the fact the person might be deported.

On March 31, 2010 the United States Supreme Court has decided that it is not correct, fair or equitable to deport someone who was not given the proper advisals and that all of the prior cases from lower courts stating differently are wrong. This is a very big case for an immigration attorney who will now have some real ammunition to use when trying to do post-conviction relief. The U.S. Supreme Court basically states that because of the drastic measure of deportation or removal is virtually inevitable for a vast number of non citizens or residents convicted of crimes, the importance of accurate legal advice for non citizens accused of crimes has never been more important. Thus, as a matter of federal law, deportation is an integral part of the penalty that may be imposed on noncitizen defendants who plead guilty to specified crimes. The case is known as Padilla vs. Kentucky. Basically, before this case, the Strickland case was used to determine whether there was effective legal counsel on this type of matter or not. However, the courts below would use the argument that since it was collateral, it could not be used against an attorney who gave the wrong advice. Being an Immigration Attorney, I never agreed with or understood how it could be ‘collateral’. If a person plead guilty to a particular crime and got a shorter sentence in criminal jail, what was the use if he was deported the rest of his life from the U.S. Finally, we have a case that addresses the reality of this issue. It would be necessary to show that the outcome would be different if the correct advice were given and that the attorney fell below the reasonable standard of care. It if is truly clear that deportation will ensue, then the consequences must be equally clear.

Since there are so many aggravated felonies as any Immigration Attorney will tell you, if the plea is that of an aggravated felony, or one that could be considered to be an aggravated felony, the criminal attorney must be very clear to the defendant that deportation will follow.The case correctly states that now the immigration laws are much more severe and it is much more likely for someone to get a deportation order based upon a crime. In the past, which a typical immigration attorney will agree, there were not nearly as many aggravated felonies or ways of getting deported or removed from the U.S. Finally, the U.S. Supreme Court has made it clear that a person should not be deported because of incompetent counsel.

Therefore, if you are a criminal defendant and are about to plea, be sure to let your criminal attorney know about this case. Alternatively, contact a knowledgeable immigration attorney to work with the criminal attorney on this matter to best protect you. If you have already plead guilty, I would still contact an immigration attorney to try to get post conviction relief under this new case. Even if you are in deportation proceedings or have an order of deportation, you should contact a qualified immigration attorney to prepare the necessary post conviction relief if you qualify.

Criminal attorney

Criminal 

Criminal law

Criminal and Immigration lawyers should work together to help you

Criminal Attorney must give consequences of deportation possibilities before Guilty Plea

Criminal Attorney must give consequences of deportation possibilities before Guilty Plea

Up until now, an Immigration Attorney would have a very difficult time trying to get post conviction relief for a criminal alien who plead guilty to some crime, was ordered deported and whereby the Immigration Attorney would try to get post conviction relief to give the foreign national an opportunity to try to beat the deportation. Almost always, the Criminal Courts would claim that immigration consequences are collateral to the main guilty plea, and because of that, whether they knew or not, a person could make a guilty plea and it would be knowingly even though they were not given proper advice by the criminal attorney, or no advice at all regarding the fact the person might be deported. This does not have to do with criminal law, but immigration law.

On March 31, 2010 the United States Supreme Court has decided that it is not correct, fair or equitable to deport someone who was not given the proper advisals and that all of the prior cases from lower courts stating differently are wrong. This is a very big case for an immigration attorney who will now have some real ammunition to use when trying to do post-conviction relief. The U.S. Supreme Court basically states that because of the drastic measure of deportation or removal is virtually inevitable for a vast number of non citizens or residents convicted of crimes, the importance of accurate legal advice for non citizens accused of crimes has never been more important. Thus, as a matter of federal law, deportation is an integral part of the penalty that may be imposed on noncitizen defendants who plead guilty to specified crimes. The case is known as Padilla vs. Kentucky. Basically, before this case, the Strickland case was used to determine whether there was effective legal counsel on this type of matter or not. However, the courts below would use the argument that since it was collateral, it could not be used against an attorney who gave the wrong advice. Being an Immigration Attorney, I never agreed with or understood how it could be ‘collateral’. If a person plead guilty to a particular crime and got a shorter sentence in criminal jail, what was the use if he was deported the rest of his life from the U.S. Finally, we have a case that addresses the reality of this issue. It would be necessary to show that the outcome would be different if the correct advice were given and that the attorney fell below the reasonable standard of care. It if is truly clear that deportation will ensue, then the consequences must be equally clear.

Since there are so many aggravated felonies as any Immigration Attorney will tell you, if the plea is that of an aggravated felony, or one that could be considered to be an aggravated felony, the criminal attorney must be very clear to the defendant that deportation will follow.The case correctly states that now the immigration laws are much more severe and it is much more likely for someone to get a deportation order based upon a crime. In the past, which a typical immigration attorney will agree, there were not nearly as many aggravated felonies or ways of getting deported or removed from the U.S. Finally, the U.S. Supreme Court has made it clear that a person should not be deported because of incompetent counsel.

Therefore, if you are a criminal defendant and are about to plea, be sure to let your criminal attorney know about this case. Alternatively, contact a knowledgeable immigration attorney to work with the criminal attorney on this matter to best protect you. If you have already plead guilty, I would still contact an immigration attorney to try to get post conviction relief under this new case. Even if you are in deportation proceedings or have an order of deportation, you should contact a qualified immigration attorney to prepare the necessary post conviction relief if you qualify.

https://cbocalbos.wordpress.com/tag/criminal/

https://cbocalbos.wordpress.com/tag/criminal-attorney/

https://cbocalbos.wordpress.com/tag/criminal-immigration/

https://californiaimmigration.us/criminal-and-immigration-lawyers-must-work-together-to-help-you/