The Commercial Appeal

High court raises bar to avoid deportatio­n

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WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Thursday made it harder for longtime immigrants who have been convicted of a crime to avoid deportatio­n.

Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the opinion for a 5-3 conservati­ve majority that ruled against a Mexican citizen who entered the U.S. illegally and has lived in the country for 25 years.

The man, Clemente Avelino Pereida, had been charged in Nebraska with using a fraudulent Social Security card to get a job and then convicted under a state law against criminal impersonat­ion.

Not all criminal conviction­s inevitably lead to deportatio­n, but Gorsuch wrote for the court that Pereida failed to prove he was not convicted of a serious crime.

Under immigratio­n law, “certain nonpermane­nt aliens seeking to cancel a lawful removal order must prove that they have not been convicted of a disqualify­ing crime,” Gorsuch wrote.

In a dissent for the three liberal justices, Justice Stephen Breyer wrote that the court instead should have ruled for Pereida because he was convicted under a law that includes serious offenses, falling into the category of crimes of moral turpitude, and less serious ones.

“The relevant documents in this case do not show that the previous conviction at issue necessaril­y was for a crime involving moral turpitude,” Breyer wrote.

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