Aggravated Felonies
§ 3.47 (D)
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(D) Convictions Vacated as Legally Invalid. Convictions that have been vacated on a ground of legal invalidity have been eliminated as grounds of deportation.[332] See § § 6.2, et seq., infra; N. Tooby & J. Rollin, Safe Havens: How to Identify and Construct Non-Deportable Convictions § 4.28 (2005).
[332] Matter of Marroquin, 23 I. & N. Dec. 705 (AG Jan. 18, 2005) (“This definition [of conviction, under INA § 101(a)(48)(A), 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(48)(A)], though broad, is clearly not intended to encompass convictions that have been formally entered but subsequently reversed on appeal or in a collateral proceeding for reasons pertaining to the factual basis for, or procedural validity of, the underlying judgment. Cf. Matter of P, 9 I. & N. Dec. 293 (A.G. 1961) (concluding that conviction set aside pursuant to writ of coram nobis for a constitutional defect could not serve as basis for order of deportation). Subsequently set-aside convictions of this type fall outside the text of the new definition because, in light of the subsequent proceedings, they cannot be considered formal adjudications of the alien’s guilt.”)