ORDER
The memorandum disposition in the above-entitled case filed June 18, 1991 is amended and redesignated a per curiam opinion.
OPINION
The United States appeals an order of the district court expunging James P. Smith’s criminal record. The district court believed that under its inherent equitable powers it could expunge all record of Smith’s felony convictions, without any finding or allegation that the convictions were unconstitutional or in violation of statutory authority. The court relied on Smith’s “otherwise clean background,” the relatively minor nature of his offenses, his
Here, there was no statutory authority for the district court’s expunction order. Instead, the court assumed that among its inherent powers was that of expunction of criminal convictions in appropriate cases. Indeed, we have sanctioned the remedy of expunction of criminal records in civil rights cases involving unconstitutional state convictions.
See, e.g., Maurer v. Los Angeles County Sheriffs Dept.,
Courts which have recognized an equitable power to expunge have unanimously observed that it is a narrow power, appropriately used only in extreme circumstances.
See, e.g., Geary v. United States,
In this case, we are presented with none of the recognized circumstances supporting expunction. There is no suggestion that Smith’s arrest or conviction was in any way unlawful or invalid, or that the government engaged in any sort of misconduct. Nor are we presented with any other factor which could outweigh the government’s interest in maintaining criminal records. The harms alleged by Smith and noted by the district court, including disbarment and a possible prohibition against reenlistment, are not unusual or unwarranted. Instead, they are the natural and intended collateral consequences of having been convicted. Were we to deem them sufficient to outweigh the government’s interest in maintaining criminal records, expunction would no longer be the narrow, extraordinary exception, but a generally available remedy. Therefore, we must vacate the order of expunction.
ORDER VACATED.
Notes
. The government notes that Smith never showed he was prohibited from reenlistment because of his prior convictions. Indeed, it contends that in all likelihood Smith would have been allowed to reenlist without any ex-punction.
