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24 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 325 (2020)
Reevaluating the Adjudication of Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude

handle is hein.journals/lewclr24 and id is 333 raw text is: 








  REEVALUATING THE ADJUDICATION OF CRIMES INVOLVING
                           MORAL TURPITUDE


                                       by
                                 Colleen Munoz`

     Criminalizing immigration status has tainted the lives ofpermanent residents
     in the United States for years. A minor misdemeanor conviction imposes the
     threat of extreme penalties for noncitizens and their continued residence in the
     United States. Specifically, a conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude
     can prevent a noncitizen from seeking admission, threaten deportation pro-
     ceedings, and jeopardize his or her ability to naturalize as a United States
     citizen. Crimes involving moral turpitude remain undefined in the Immigra-
     tion and Nationality Act, causing courts to adjudicate the crimes arbitrarily.
     In the absence of statutory or administrative direction, jurisdictions across the
     United States generally employ a two-step categorical approach to analyze the
     definition of moral turpitude and to adjudicate the associated crimes. First,
     the court identifies the requisite elements of the state statutory conviction. Sec-
     ond, the court compares the state statutory elements of the conviction to the
     generic federal crime. A crime of moral turpitude is determined if all state
     statutory elements are a categorical match to the generic federal counterpart.
     The employed categorical approach appears facially determinable. Yet crimi-
     nal convictions for similar crimes continue to elicit varying immigration con-
     sequences due to the swing of the political pendulum. Attorneys general intro-
     duce loopholes into the traditional two-step categorical approach effectively
     altering the outcome of a conviction which would otherwise not be considered
     a crime involving moral turpitude. This Note describes the traditional cate-
     gorical approach and explores the modifications proposed, exercised, or rejected
     as the approach continues to evolve. Finally, this Note proposes a solution to
     adjudicate crimes involving moral turpitude.


Introduction .................................................................................................... 326
I. Relationship with Immigrants and Crime ............................................. 329
       A.   Crimmigration:  The Immigration Law  and  Criminal Law  Merger ... 330
II. Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude....................................................... 331
       A.   Framing  a Loose Definition............................................................. 332
       B.   The Effect of a Conviction for a Crime Involving Moral Turpitude.... 334
       C.   The Adjudication Process ................................................................ 336


325

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