From Immigrant Legal Resource Center <[email protected]>
Subject All Those Rules About CIMT Practice Advisory
Date June 23, 2021 2:03 PM
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All Those Rules About Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude Practice Advisory

A conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude (CIMT) may or may not hurt an immigrant, depending on a number of factors set out in the Immigration and Nationality Act: the number of CIMT convictions, the potential and actual sentence, when the person committed or was convicted of the offense, and the person’s immigration situation. A single CIMT conviction might cause no damage, or it might cause a variety of penalties ranging from deportability to ineligibility for relief to mandatory detention.

This practice advisory collects and discusses all the statutory provisions that govern when a CIMT conviction has consequences, with an emphasis on Ninth Circuit cases and California offenses. This May 2021 update includes an analysis of several recent court decisions.

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Immigrant Legal Resource Center
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