We affirm the denial of appellant’s untimely motion for postconviction relief. In it, appellant alleged that his attorney mi-sadvised him as to the consequences to his immigration status of his plea and sentence. He pled no contest to sale or delivery of controlled pills (MDMA, known as “ecstasy”) and received a withhold of adjudication with eighteen months of probation. When his green card, allowing him legal residency in this country, came up for renewal six years later, he discovered that, even though his attorney had advised him that a withhold of adjudication might prevent deportation, deportation for the crime was automatic, regardless of the withholding of adjudication. He moved for postconviction relief based upon his attorney’s misadvice, which the trial court denied.
His motion was untimely. See Marshall v. State,
In Marshall, we certified conflict with Rodriguez v. State,
Affirmed.
