IMMIGRATION LAW & POLICY

Removal Issues Concerning Criminal Convictions

 

 

IN RE AHMAD ALDABESHEH:  BIA CLARIFIES "AGGREGATE TERM OF IMPRISONMENT" IN CASES INVOLVING CONCURRENT SENTENCES
Immigrants’ Rights Update, Vol. 13, No. 6, October 14, 1999

In the case of a legal permanent resident who received concurrent sentences for two separate felony convictions, the Board of Immigration Appeals has ruled that, for purposes of determining eligibility for withholding of removal, the "aggregate term of imprisonment" is equal to the length of the longest sentence imposed.

Based on Immigration and Nationality Act section 241(b)(3), which renders individuals convicted of "particularly serious crimes" ineligible for withholding relief, the immigration judge had ordered the respondent removed.  Under that section, aggravated felonies are considered "particularly serious" if the aggregate of the resulting term of imprisonment is at least five years.  The two concurrent one- to three-year sentences imposed on the respondent amounted, the IJ held, to a six-year aggregate sentence.

Citing Matter of Fernandez, 14 I. & N. Dec. 24 (BIA 1972), a prior case in which it addressed the issue of aggregate sentences, the BIA disagreed and found that "where a judge in criminal proceedings imposes concurrent sentences, the defendant’s ‘aggregate sentence’ is equal to the length of the longest concurrent sentence."  Based on that method of calculation, the BIA concluded that the respondent had been sentenced to less than five years’ imprisonment.  Pursuant to its recent ruling in Matter of S–S– (holding that a felony conviction resulting in less than five years’ imprisonment constitutes a "particularly serious crime" only if an individual examination of the conviction’s circumstances warrants such a conclusion), the BIA remanded the matter and ordered the IJ to develop further the record and properly determine whether the respondent’s offenses were particularly serious.

In re Ahmad Aldabesheh, Int. Dec. 3410 (BIA Aug. 30, 1999).

 

Home | What's New | About NILC | Publications | Community Education Materials
Immigrants & Employment | Immigrants & Public Benefits | Immigration Law & Policy
Trainings | Links
California Immigrant Welfare Collaborative