Practice Advisory. State no-plea diversion programs in which a defendants confession is not placed in the court file do not constitute convictions for immigration purposes under the statutory definition of conviction. INA 101(a)(48)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(48)(A). The admission of facts referred to in this statute must mean an admission to the court, rather than to the prosecutor. It is possible, however, for an ICE attorney to ask the prosecutor for a copy and try to use it in removal proceedings to establish a conviction. An immigration judge could rule " wrongly " that when respondent agreed that the agreement admitting guilt could come into the court later, without objection, the noncitizen was admitting to the sufficiency of the facts in relation to a judicial proceeding sufficient to establish a conviction under the statute. In Maricopa County, Arizona, the drug diversion program does have the defendant sign a written confession, but that paper stays with TASC personnel (a private company), not the judge or the prosecutor. If the defendant completes the program, the TASC file is closed and only the certificate of completion is transmitted to the prosecutor. If the defendant fails the program, only then is the written confession transferred to the prosecutor, who then can use the written confession to re-start the prosecution. This system should be sufficient to avoid a conviction for immigration purposes. Thanks to Margarita Silva and Jonathan Moore.

jurisdiction: 
Other

 

TRANSLATE