Tagged #deportability
Every article we've published on this topic, sorted by the agency's own announcement date.
Firearms-Offense Deportability Under §237(a)(2)(C): The 'Any Felony or Misdemeanor' Trigger and the Antique-Firearm Carve-Out
INA §237(a)(2)(C) makes a noncitizen LPR deportable for any firearms or destructive-device conviction — even a misdemeanor. Matter of Chairez-Castrejon sets the categorical analysis.
Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude After Silva-Trevino II: The Categorical Approach Is Back
The BIA's 2016 Silva-Trevino decision restored the categorical approach for CIMT determinations and rejected the realistic-probability fact-finding the AG had grafted on in 2008. Here's what that means in practice.
False Claim to U.S. Citizenship Under INA §212(a)(6)(C)(ii): The Catastrophic Ground With No General Waiver
A false claim to U.S. citizenship made on or after September 30, 1996, for any purpose or benefit under federal or state law, is a permanent inadmissibility and deportability ground — with no §212(i) waiver.
Crime of Domestic Violence Deportability Under §237(a)(2)(E): The Categorical Approach and the Domestic-Relationship Element
INA §237(a)(2)(E) makes a noncitizen LPR deportable for a single conviction of a crime of domestic violence, stalking, child abuse, or violation of a protective order. The categorical analysis is unforgiving.
Aggravated Felonies: The §101(a)(43) Laundry List and the One-Year-Sentence Trigger
INA §101(a)(43) defines 21 categories of 'aggravated felony' for immigration purposes, and many turn on a one-year-or-more sentence imposed — not served. Here's how the trigger actually works.