Safe Havens



 
 

§ 7.108 (E)

 
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(E)  Firearms Offenses.  Many firearms offenses are held not to be crimes involving moral turpitude, either because they have no sufficiently culpable intent or because they are in essence regulatory offenses.  Sometimes, a court holds a firearms offense to be a CMT where criminal intent or an intent to use the weapon to inflict great injury is involved.  A conviction under a statute that gives rise to no such presumption and does not require that the defendant have the intent to use the firearm illegally does not constitute a CMT even under Matter of S.[958]


[958] Matter of S, 8 I. & N. Dec. 344 (BIA 1959) (carrying a concealed weapon is a crime of moral turpitude under a Minnesota law that specifies that carrying a concealed deadly weapon gives rise to the presumption that the person carrying the weapon has the intent to use the weapon against another person).

 

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