OPINION
Petitioner Christopher Pickering seeks review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) order permanently barring him from the United States, based on a Canadian conviction for a drug offense, for which he was later pardoned pursuant to Canadian law, and which was later quashed by a Canadian appellate court.
Finding prejudicial error, we grant the Petition for Review.
Petitioner is a native and сitizen of Canada. On November 6, 1980, he was indicted in Ontario, Canada, for the unlawful possession of Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (“LSD”). He pled guilty. His sentence required him to pay a fine of $300.00 (Canadian) or, in default of payment, to serve 30 days in custody.
In 1991, Petitioner entered the United States as a non-immigrant, intra-company transferee. His wife and them two chil *527 dren followed him as derivative non-immigrants. In 1992, the Immigration and Naturalizatiоn Service (“INS”) 1 approved a Petition for Alien Worker (Form 1-140) filed on behalf of Petitioner’s wife by her employer. Mrs. Pickering later applied for adjustment of status based on the approved 1-140, and Petitioner and their children filed derivative adjustment of status applications based on their relationship to Mrs. Pickering. On June 17, 1993, the INS approved Mrs. Pickering and the children’s adjustment of status applications, making them lawful permanent residents.
On February 28, 1996, Petitioner received a pardon of his LSD conviction. Notwithstanding the pardon, his attempt to adjust his status was denied. On May 7, 1997, Petitioner filed a notice of appeal, with the Canadian court, seeking to have that conviction quashed. In a judgment dated June 20, 1997, the Canadian court quashed the Petitioner’s 1980 conviction for unlawful possession of LSD. On August 21, 1998, the Petitioner’s аpplication for adjustment of status was again denied and removal proceedings were initiated, with the Immigration Judge finding the Petitioner to be removable on the basis of his LSD conviction. In his decision, the Immigration Judge declined to give effect to the Canadian court’s order quashing the conviction, concluding that the court’s action was solely for rehabilitative purposes, entered in order to avoid adverse immigration consequences and to allow the Petitioner to live permanently in the United States. The Petitioner appealed the Immigration Judge’s decision to the BIA, and the BIA issued a published opinion denying Petitioner’s appeal. Matter of Pickering, 23 I & N Dec. 621 (BIA 2003).
The BIA had jurisdiction, pursuant to 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(b), to review the decision of the Immigration Judge who ordered Petitioner’s removal. The BIA decision is a final agency decision. 8 C.F.R. § 1241.1. The Petitioner’s Petition for Review was filed in a timely manner pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(1). This Court has jurisdiction to review the BIA decision pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a).
We review questions of law raised in removal proceedings
de novo. Huicochea-Gomez v. INS,
Pickering first argues that the BIA’s decision fails as a matter of law. However, a review of that decision and the applicable case law reveals that the BIA correctly interpreted the law by holding that, if a court vacates an alien’s conviction for reasons solely related to rehabilitation or to avoid adverse immigration hardships, rather than on the basis of a procedural or substantive defect in the underlying criminal proceedings, the conviction is not eliminated for immigration purposes.
Matter of Pickering,
23 I & N Dec. 621, 624 (BIA 2003). This interpretation of thе law is consistent with that of other circuits and with our own interpretation. A conviction vacated for rehabilitative or immigration reasons remains valid for immigration purposes, while one vacated because of procedural or substantive infirmities does not.
2
*528
See Zaitona v. INS,
The BIA upheld the Immigration Judge’s order that Petitioner was removable based on the quashed drug conviction, ruling that the Canadian court had quashed the Petitioner’s drug conviction solely for immigration purposes, in other words, to avoid adverse immigration consequences. Matter of Pickering, 23 I & N Dec. at 625, J.A. at 38. In determining that the Petitioner’s conviction remained valid for immigration purposes, despite the order of the Canadian court quashing the conviction, the BIA relied on “the law under which the Canаdian court issued its order and the terms of the order itself, as well as the reasons presented by the respondent in requesting that the court vacate the conviction.” Id.
However, the record used by the BIA to determine that the Canadian court acted solely for immigration purposes appears to be incomplete. The BIA based its ruling on the fact that the “judgment only refers, as the grounds for ordеring the conviction quashed, to the respondent’s request and his supporting affidavit.” Id. In fact, the Canadian court, in quashing the Petitioner’s conviction, relied on “the notice of appeal filed herein and the affidavit of the [Petitioner] and [the] hearing.... ” J.A. at 62. There is nothing in the record before us regarding the hearing that the Canadian court relied upon, in part, to quash the conviction.
The Petitioner, in his notice of appeal and affidavit, stated that he was appealing his conviction because of the bar it placed on his permanent immigration to the United States. J.A. at 58 ¶ 5, 61 ¶ 18. The BIA imparted the Petitioner’s motivation for seeking to have the conviction quashed onto the Canadian court as its rationale for quashing the conviction.
Matter of Pickering,
23 I
&
N Dec. at 625, J.A. at 38. However, the motive of the Petitionеr in seeking to have his conviction quashed is of limited relevance to our inquiry.
See Sandoval v. INS,
The government relies on this Court’s ruling in
Zaitona,
In
Zaitona,
the only explanation offered by the state court for vacating the conviction was so that it might consider a Judicial Recommendation Against Deportation (“JRAD”).
Zaitona,
As the order of the Canadian court is silent on the question of its motivation or rationale, the BIA looked to the notice of appeal and affidavit filed by the Petitioner, ruling that neither identified a basis to question the integrity of the underlying criminal proceeding or conviction. There is no reference to the hearing before the Canadian court, no indication that the BIA had that record in its possession and no indication that it reviewed it in any fashion to determine the rationale behind the decision of that court. Id. In its decision, the BIA distinguished the Petitioner’s case from its ruling in Matter of Rodriguez-Ruiz, 22 I & N Dec. 1378. J.A. at 36, 23 I & N Dec. at 623. In Rodriguez-Ruiz, a state court vacated a conviction pursuant to a state law that authorized vacation based on the legal merits of the underlying provision. 22 I & N Dec. at 1379. In the instant case, because the Canadian court order made no reference to any legal authority, the BIA presumed that its decision was made solely for immigration purposes. J.A. at 38, 23 I & N Dec. at 625. While assuming that the Canadian court adopted the Petitioner’s motive, the BIA has also assumed that it ignored the legal basis the Petitioner articulated for seeking to have his conviction quashed.
In his notice of appеal to the Canadian court (J.A. at 58, ¶ 6), and in the affidavit in support of said appeal (J.A. at 61, ¶ 21), the Petitioner indicates that he is appealing his conviction pursuant to § 24(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Section 24(1) provides that: “[a]ny-one whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this Charter, have been infringed or denied, may appeal to a court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriate and just.” Affidavit of Kent Roach, J.A. at 40, ¶ 7. The Petitioner presented expert testimony, via affidavit, which concluded that, in order to quash the Petitioner’s conviction, the Canadian court “must have concluded that [his] rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [had] been violated.” Id. at 41, ¶ 8.
According to the expert testimony provided by the Petitionеr, which was undisputed by the government, a Canadian court can quash a conviction under § 24(1) of the Charter only for reasons related to a violation of rights granted Canadian citizens in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Id. at .41, ¶ 10. If the Canadian court acted pursuant to the legal authority cited and relied upon by the Petitioner, it could not have acted solely for immigration reasons. In presuming that the Canadian court quashed the con *530 viction for immigration reasons, the BIA concluded that the Canadian court assumed the Petitioner’s motives as stated in his affidavit and notice of appeal, but did not consider the legal authority he cited.
When the government seeks to deport a resident alien, it carries a heavy burden.
Berenyi v. District Director, Immigration and Naturalization Service,
The BIA relied on the Petitioner’s notice of appeal and affidavit in determining that the Canadian court acted on the basis of the Petitioner’s immigration status. In doing so, it overlooked the fact that the record was incomplete without a record of the hearing held by the Canadian court, *531 and minimized or even ignored the fact that the Petitioner appealed his conviction pursuant to a law that allows a remedy only for procedural or substantive defects in the underlying conviction. The conclusion that the Canadian court acted solely for immigration reasons can only be reached by inference, based on the Petitioner’s notice of appeal and affidavit. As the record from the Canadian court appears to be incomplete, and the BIA relied on certain parts of the Petitioner’s affidavit and notice of appeal, while minimizing or ignoring other parts, the evidence supporting deportation can hardly be described as “clear, convincing and unequivocal.”
The BIA, in the instant case, uphеld the Immigration Judge’s finding that the government had met its burden of proving that the Petitioner was deportable with clear, convincing and unequivocal evidence. That determination “must be upheld if ‘supported by reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on the record considered as a whole.’ ” INS
v. Elias-Zacarias,
The Petitioner was found by the IJ, and later the BIA, to be deportable based upon a Canadian drug conviction. The conviction, however, had been quashed. A vacated conviction remains valid for immigration purposes only if it was vacated solely for rehabilitative reasons. The IJ, and later the BIA, found that the Petitioner’s quashed conviction was still valid for immigration purposes, apparently concluding that it had been vacated solely for rehabilitation reasons, to wit: to allow the petitioner to remain in this country. It is the opinion of this Court that the evidence on the record does not support such a finding. Specifically, we conclude that thе government has failed to satisfy its burden of proving deportability with clear, convincing and unequivocal evidence.
Generally, where a reviewing court cannot sustain an agency decision, because the agency has failed to offer a legally sufficient basis for its decision, the appropriate remedy is to remand to the agency for further consideration.
See I.N.S. v. Ventura,
*532 Were we to remand for further proceedings, the only way that the government might satisfy its burden is by introducing evidence not currently on the record. In reviewing removal proceedings, under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1), while we have broadеr powers of review than are granted courts in reviewing petitions for asylum, we do not have the authority to remand for consideration of additional evidence where one of the parties seeks to introduce such, and there is nothing to indicate that Congress intended to grant us the authority to do such sua sponte, 4
The record before the BIA at the time it made its decision did not contain evidence sufficiеnt to support a finding of deporta-bility. Had the BIA properly applied the facts before it to the law, it would have held that the Petitioner was not deporta-ble. The proper course in the circumstances before us is to reverse without a remand for further consideration.
See Cruz-Garza v. Ashcroft,
We conclude that the INS did not prove by clear, unеquivocal, and convincing evidence that Pickering’s conviction remained valid for immigration purposes. The INS did not prove that the Canadian court quashed the Petitioner’s conviction solely to avoid adverse immigration consequences. The BIA held that the government had satisfied its burden of proving the Petitioner deportable, and the evidence compels a contrary conclusion. We thus hold that the BIA and the Immigration Judge erred in finding that Pickering was deportable. Accordingly, the judgment of the BIA is REVERSED and we REMAND this case to the Board of Immigration Appeals for entry of an order terminating deportation proceedings and quashing the order of deportation.
Notes
. The functions of the Immigration and Naturalization Service have been transferred to the Department of Homeland Security, pursuant to the Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub.L. No. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135.
. A conviction is vacated for rehabilitative purposes where state law provides a means for the trial court to enable a Defendant to avoid certain continuing effects under state law from that conviction.
See Murillo-Espinoza v. INS,
. The government argues, in a supplemental brief filed after the close of oral argument, that the burden to prove that the сonviction was
not
quashed solely for immigration reasons lies with the Petitioner. However, we agree with the determination of the BIA, the Seventh Circuit and the Tenth Circuit that the government bears the burden of proving that a vacated conviction remains valid for immigration purposes.
See Matter of Kaneda,
16 I. & N. Dec. 677, 680,
. Section 1252(a)(1) provides that:
Judicial review of a final order of removal ... is governed only by chapter 158 of Title 28, except ... that the court may not order the taking of additional evidence under section 2347(c) of Title 28.
Where applied, § 1252(a)(1) has most often limited the petitioner's ability to introduce new evidence on review, or the court's ability to require the BIA to open the record to take additional evidence.
See Lin v. Gonzales,
