Carr petitions us to review the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (Board), holding him deportable under section 241(a)(2)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act), 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(2)(C). We have jurisdiction over this timely petition pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a). We deny the petition.
I
Carr is a native of Canada who entered the United States at Blaine, Washington, on March 12, 1967. At that time, he was two years old, and he entered as a legal permanent resident.
On November 7, 1991, Carr was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon in violation of California Penal Code § 245(a)(2) (prohibiting “[a]ny person [from] committing] an assault upon the person of another with a firearm”). The Act subjects aliens convicted of firearms offenses to deportation. See 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(2)(C). On March 8, 1993, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (Service) issued Carr an order to show cause charging his deportability.
Carr challenged his deportation by moving the immigration judge (IJ) to terminate deportation proceedings so that he could receive an expungement of his conviction under California Penal Code § 1203.4. An ex-pungement, Carr argued, would make his conviction nonreeognizable for deportation purposes.
See generally Matter of Ozkok,
19 I. & N.Dec. 546 (BIA 1988) (a conviction for a crime of moral turpitude, if expunged, may not support deportation). The IJ and subsequently the Board denied this motion, ruling that the Service only recognizes expungements for certain specific classes of crimes. Carr’s firearms offense did not fall within any of these classes, and, therefore, there would be no purpose in delaying deportation
*951
to allow Carr to seek expungement. In Ms petition to us, Carr argues that the Service’s policy of recognizmg expungement for some crimes, but not the weapons offense for wMch he was convicted, violates Ms right to equal protection under the Constitution’s Due Process Clause. Although Carr did not raise tMs constitutional objection in Ms admimstrative hearings, we conclude we should hear it.
Garberding v. INS,
II
We review the Board’s determination of questions of law de novo, but give deference to the Board’s interpretation of the Act.
Ghaly v. INS,
Aliens against whom courts have rendered a “final conviction” are generally deportable.
See Gutierrez v. INS,
Second, the Service also recognizes the expungement of certain drug offenses.
See Garberding,
Carr’s weapons offense does not fall within these limited exceptions. It is not a crime of moral turpitude.
See Komarenko v. INS,
Against tMs obvious application of the Act and its explanatory precedent, Carr makes an equal protection claim. He argues that the Service’s distinction between ex-pungeable and nonexpungeable crimes has no rational basis and thus violates Ms due process right of equal protection.
See Garberding,
First, Carr points to
Garberding
as support for his claim, but this case gives him no help. It dealt with a problem resulting from the Service’s practice of recognizing ex-pungement of state convictions only if the state statute which expunged the alien’s conviction substantially resembled section 3607.
Id.
at 1188-91;
see also Deris,
Int. Dec. 3102. Deportation, therefore, depended upon which state’s laws the alien happened to violate. We struck down this Service practice on equal protection grounds.
Garberding,
Following Garberding, the Service abandoned the approach, exemplified in Deris, of recognizing state expungements only when the state expungement statute is a “counterpart” to the federal first offender statute. Instead, under current practice, the Service will not deport an alien convicted under state law if the alien can “establish[ ] that he would have been eligible for federal first offender treatment.” Manrique, Int. Dec. 3250 at 11. The Service declared that Deris and similar eases are thereby “modified” to reflect this new understanding of the law. Id.
Carr asserts that Garberding somehow requires us to hold that the Service’s distinction between firearms on the one hand, and moral turpitude and drug crimes on the other, is irrational and violative of due process. Garberding, however, ruled only on the constitutionality of treating aliens differently on the basis of which state laws they violated. It concluded only that treating aliens differently on the basis of their state expungement statute is irrational; it did not speak to the issue of treating aliens differently on the basis of the crimes they had committed. Because the holding of Garberding is so limited, it cannot serve Carr’s purpose of showing that the Service’s distinctions based on the crimes aliens commit violate due process.
As a second argument, Carr asserts that it is irrational to allow expungement for crimes of moral turpitude, but not for weapons offenses, where many crimes of moral turpitude would seem greatly more egregious than firearms offenses.
Cabasug v. INS,
Cabasug
dealt with a slightly different issue: whether the Service can rationally deny discretionary deportation or exclusion relief under section 212(c) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c), to aliens convicted of firearms offenses, but not to aliens convicted of more serious crimes. The principle adopted in
Cabasug
is clear: the Service can craft different policies for firearms offenses even though some would view them as out of line with its policy towards other crimes.
See Cabasug,
PETITION DENIED.
