A small group of members has been meeting to discuss the School to Deportation Pipeline, how immigrant and undocumented youth in schools can face
immigration consequences such as detention and deportation when law enforcement are allowed in and around schools or involved in school discipline related matters.
Not exact matches
Since a criminal prosecution, guilty plea, or conviction can be the trigger for negative
immigration consequences,
such as Deportation or Denial of Naturalization, etc., by managing or winning the criminal case, a much more difficult
immigration law problem may be avoided.
In the afternoon, the two groups will join for discussion of
immigration consequences of criminal offenses, and post-conviction relief for immigrants, including discussion of several new California laws
such as PC § § 18.5 (a) and (b), 1000, 1203.43, and 1473.7.
Third, the Court's rigid constitutional rule could inadvertently head off more promising ways of addressing the underlying problem —
such as statutory or administrative reforms requiring trial judges to inform a defendant on the record that a guilty plea may carry adverse
immigration consequences.