277 F. 239 | W.D. Wash. | 1921
The petitioner charges that he is worngfully deprived of his liberty by the Commissioner of Immigration. A show cause was issued and return avers that the petitioner is detained for deportation as an alien person not entitled to remain by1 virtue of an order issued by the Secretary of Eabor. To the return is attached the record and file in the hearing before the bureau. The petitioner is directed to be deported for the reason that:
“He has become a public charge within five years after his entry into the United States from causes not affirmatively shown to have arisen subsequent thereto, and that he was a person likely to become a public charge at the time of entry into the United States.”
The court record of conviction, which is conclusive here, shows that the alien was responsible for the entry of contraband aliens from Mexico and on being indicted pleaded guilty and was sentenced to the federal prison for two years. He urges that the offense for which he was convicted is not urged as a ground for deportation, and that he is not a person likely to become a public charge, a charge where for some reason a person is to be supported “at public expense by reason of poverty; insanity and poverty; disease and poverty,” and not for a reason which is included within the other provisions of the statute with relation to crime and conviction. Section 3, Act. Feb. 5, 1917 (section 428934b, Comp. Stat.), excludes:
“Persons who have been convicted of, or admit having committed a felony or other crime * * • involving moral turpitude * * * [and] persons likely to become a public charge.”
Section 19 (section 4289%jj) fixes conduct or condition of aliens admitted for which, they may be deported:
(1) “Any alien who within five years after entry becomes a public charge from causes not affirmatively shown to have arisen subsequently to landing; * * * ” (2) “any alien who. is hereafter sentenced to imprisonment for a*241 term of one year or more because oí conviction * * * of a crime involving moral turpitude, committed vriiliin five years after the entry of the alien to the United States. * * * ”
A felony is an offense which may be punished by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding one year. Crim. Code, § 335 (section 10509, Comp. Stat). “Turpitude” is defined by Webster to be inherent baseness or vileness of principal or acting.
“Everything dono contrary to justice, honesty, modesty, and good morals is said to be done with turpitude.” Bouvier.
And “moral turpitude” is defined as:
“An act of baseness, villainy, or depravity in the private social duties which a man owes to his fellow man or to society in general, contrary to the accepted and customary rule of right and duty between man and man. State v. Mason, 29 Ore. 18; Blackburn v. Clark, 41 S. W. 430; Baxter v. Mohr, 76 N. Y. Sup. 982.” 5 Words and Phrases, p. 4580.