In re Miguel Ignacio RODRIGUEZ-RUIZ, Respondent
File A74 726 833 - Batavia
United States Department of Justice, Executive Office for Immigration Review, Board of Immigration Appeals
Decided as amended November 8, 2000
Interim Decision #3436 | 22 I&N Dec. 1378
William H. Berger, Esquire, Buffalo, New York, for respondent
Denise C. Hochul, Assistant District Counsel, for the Immigration and Naturalization Service
Before: Board Panel: DUNNE, Vice Chairman; HOLMES and GUENDELSBERGER, Board Members.
GUENDELSBERGER, Board Member:
In a decision dated November 10, 1999, an Immigration Judge denied the respondent’s motion to terminate proceedings, found him removable under section 237(a)(2)(A)(iii) of the Immigration and Nationality Act,
The respondent, a native and citizen of Mexico, was paroled into the United States on January 26, 1996, and became a lawful permanent resident
[I]t is ORDERED, that pursuant to CPL 440, the judgment had in this Court on March 24, 1999 based upon a plea colloquy dated February 5, 1999 convicting said Defendant of the crime of Sexual Abuse 3rd and the sentence of one (1) year probation are in all respects vacated, on the legal merits, as if said conviction had never occurred and the matter is restored to the docket for further proceedings.
The parties agree that the determinative issue in this case is whether the respondent’s conviction, having been vacated, constitutes a “conviction” as defined in section 101(a)(48)(A) of the Act,
Despite the Service’s arguments on appeal, we find that the order of the New York court does not constitute a state action which purports to expunge, dismiss, cancel, vacate, discharge, or otherwise remove a guilty plea or other record of guilt or conviction by operation of a state rehabilitative statute. See Matter of Roldan, supra. The New York criminal law provision under which the respondent’s conviction was vacated is neither an expungement statute nor a rehabilitative statute.
The Service urges us to go behind the state court judgment and question whether the New York court acted in accordance with its own state law
The criminal conviction upon which the charge of removability is based has been vacated. Because we agree that the state court order vacating the conviction does not constitute a state rehabilitative action under Matter of Roldan, supra, there is no current basis to find the respondent removable as charged. Accordingly, the appeal will be sustained, and the removal proceedings will be terminated.
ORDER:
The appeal is sustained, and the removal proceedings are terminated.
