Criminal Defense of Immigrants



 
 

§ 11.28 (B)

 
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(B)  Strategic Factors:  Factors that are somewhat different from normal criminal defense strategy may play an important role, including the fact that the case may be quite old, sometimes many years old, before post‑conviction relief is sought to reopen the conviction.  It may therefore be difficult for the prosecution to prove its case if the conviction is successfully reopened because of (a) lost witnesses, (b) destroyed evidence, (c) faded memories, (d) witnesses who are reluctant to reopen the closed incident or trauma, (e) lost prosecution or police files, (f) new prosecutors, and the like.

 

                Moreover, the prosecution, court, police and victim(s) may not care very deeply whether or not the client is convicted again because (a) the client has served the sentence, (b) the client has enjoyed a good record before and since the original conviction, (c) the wounds have healed, etc.  Also, courts and counsel often now have greater consciousness about the need to protect clients against adverse immigration consequences of criminal convictions.  Court and prosecutor, however, often have limited willingness to devote time and attention to a case they view as an old, closed case.  There usually is no upside for them — no benefit to be had.

 

                PRACTICE TIP:  Many of these factors work against the client in attempting to reopen a conviction but work powerfully in the client’s favor once the conviction has been forced open.[273]


[273] See N. Tooby, Evaluating the Chances of Obtaining Post-Conviction Relief:  What Immigration Lawyers Need To Know, in practice under iiraira one year later 223 (AILA 1997), and N. Tooby, post-conviction relief (2000), for a comprehensive discussion of this subject.

 

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