Cabrera was convicted of receipt by a felon of a firearm that had been transported in interstate and foreign commerce, 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(h)(1) and 922(a).
Previously Cabrera was convicted in state court of a felony of cocaine possession. He pleaded guilty, and the trial court accepted and entered an order “withholding adjudication.” 1
After his indictment on the federal charge and before trial the state court vacated Cabrera’s underlying felony conviction. At the federal trial Cabrera sought to introduce evidence of this vacation, and *1098 the court sustained the government’s objection to the evidence as immaterial since the state court conviction, and the order withholding adjudication, were in effect when Cabrera purchased the gun.
Whether one is convicted within the language of the Act is a question of federal law even if the underlying offense and punishment are defined by state law.
Dickerson v. New Banner Institute Inc.,
The district court was correct. The cases make clear that one who is or has been a convicted felon must clear his status, if it is unclear, before buying a firearm.
Lewis v. U.S.,
What Cabrera did, and all he did, was, after indictment and arrest, secure an order of the state court vacating the predicate offense. This is not enough. 2
Cabrera contends that Lewis and Dickerson should be extended to a conviction vacated after the firearm was received or possessed. The plain language of the Act and the principles laid out in Lewis, Dickerson and Davis show that expunction of the underlying conviction after the purchase of the firearm has no effect on a conviction for § 922(h) purposes.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This constitutes a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 922, and Cabrera does not contend otherwise.
Dickerson
v.
New Banner Institute Inc.,
. Vacation or reversal on a direct appeal of the conviction does eliminate the conviction as a predicate offense. Lewis, supra.
