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Seminar
Topics:
I.
Multiple Drug Possession Aggravated Felonies - The Supreme
Court's forthcoming decision in Carachuri-
Rosendo will be decided by the time of the seminar,
outlining when a second possession conviction constitutes
an aggravated felony, and related topics.
II.
Crime of Violence Aggravated Felonies Under 18 U.S.C.
§ 16(b) - Defenses such as the actual violence
requirement, the requirement that the conviction be
a felony, and the use of statistics to avoid a finding
of a
substantial likelihood that actual violence would be
used in the commission of the offense.
III.
Good Moral Character - Crime-related statutory bars
to showing good moral character, which affect many
important categories of immigration relief such as naturalization.
IV.
Post-Conviction Relief Based on Ineffective Assistance
of Counsel - The Supreme Court's forthcoming decision
in Padilla v. Kentucky will be decided, on whether defense
counsel's affirmative misadvice on immigration
consequences constitutes reversible ineffective assistance
of counsel.
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About
the Instructors
Norton
Tooby graduated in 1967 with a B.A. from
Harvard, and in 1970 with a J.D. from the Stanford Law
School, where he served as President of the Stanford
Law Review. He has been listed in BEST LAWYERS IN AMERICA,
and called "the best post-conviction lawyer in
the United States." In 2000, the Immigrant Legal
Resource Center awarded him its Philip Burton Immigration
& Civil Rights Award for Immigration Lawyering for
"his pioneering work in the field of post-conviction
relief for immigrants."
His national practice is based in Oakland, California.
He consults in person and by telephone concerning immigration
consequences of criminal convictions. He also obtains
post-conviction relief from criminal convictions for
immigrants nationwide, and writes practice manuals for
immigration and criminal lawyers
Casework
- He handled a death penalty appeal in the California
Supreme Court, which resulted in reversal of all convictions
and in which the client was set at liberty. People v.
Marks, 45 Cal.3d 1335 (1988). His published post-conviction
victories in the field of post-conviction relief for
immigrants include People v. Totari, 111 Cal.App.4th
1202 (2003) (reversing trial court's order denying a
motion to vacate a conviction under Penal Code §
1016.5); People v. Totari, 28 Cal.4th 876 (2002) (holding
that denial of a motion to vacate a conviction under
Penal Code § 1016.5 is appealable); In re Resendiz,
25 Cal.4th 230 (2001) (holding that defense counsel's
misadvice concerning actual immigration consequences
of plea constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel,
resulting in reversal if prejudice is shown, even if
the defendant was given the advice on possible immigration
consequences required by Penal Code § 1016.5)(represented
amici curiae on the briefs and in oral argument). He
is lead counsel in People v. Kim, S153183, now pending
in the California Supreme Court, which will determine
(1) whether the criminal court has authority to grant
coram nobis relief after custody has expired where no
one knew the actual immigration consequences of a plea,
(2) whether the court has authority to grant a non-statutory
motion to vacate a conviction, after custody has expired,
on grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel, and
(3) whether counsel renders ineffective assistance by
failing to investigate and advise the defendant concerning
the adverse immigration consequences of a plea.
Publications
- CALIFORNIA POST-CONVICTION RELIEF FOR IMMIGRANTS (2002),
POST-CONVICTION RELIEF FOR IMMIGRANTS (National Edition
2004), CALIFORNIA EXPUNGEMENT MANUAL (2002), and, with
J.J. Rollin, CRIMINAL DEFENSE OF IMMIGRANTS (4th ed.
2007), SAFE HAVENS: HOW TO IDENTIFY AND CONSTRUCT NON-DEPORTABLE
CONVICTIONS (2005), CRIMES OF MORAL TURPITUDE (2d ed.
2005), and AGGRAVATED FELONIES (3d ed. 2006). For five
years, he served as the Update Editor for D. Kesselbrenner
& L. Rosenberg, IMMIGRATION LAW AND CRIMES (West
2007). He also maintains the website at www.CriminalAndImmigrationLaw.com.
Seminars
- Norton Tooby is very experienced at designing and
delivering excellent seminars, using sophisticated,
interactive adult-education techniques with written
materials, powerpoint projections, and exercises. The
participant evaluations from his most recent seminar
averaged 4.5 on a scale of 5, and prompted the following
written comments: "Great written material."
"All of my questions and concerns have been answered."
"Very knowledgeable re: subject matter; made material
easy to understand." "Thanks for being so
current. "Excellent outlining." "Written
materials were great." "Very clear."
"You have mastered the material and the case law
analysis, right up-to-date." "You are so knowledgeable
and have so much to say and your delivery (tone, stories,
grasp of the material) that every word you speak at
the seminar is very important. Your love for the subject
matter is obvious, too."
Dan
Kesselbrenner is a nationally-recognized
expert on the immigration consequences of criminal convictions.
He supervises all National Immigration Project work
having to do with incarceration and detention issues
for immigrants, including our 2002-2003 Defending Rights
Program (funded by the Ford Foundation) and our on-going
prison letters program. Dan also represents the National
Immigration Project on coalition projects such as the
Soros and Ford funded Defending Immigrants Partnership,
the BIA Pro Bono Appeals Project, and the legal team
for the 2003 Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride. He is the
co-author of Immigration Law and Crimes (West Publishing)
and numerous articles on immigration law. In 1992, he
served on President Clintons Department of Justice
Immigrant Transition Team. He has also received the
American Immigration Lawyers Associations Jack
Wasserman Award, the National Immigration Projects
Carol King Award, and Central American Refugee Centers
Achievement Award for his work advancing and defending
immigrants rights.
"Norton
and Dan are not only national experts, but fantastic
trainers as well."
- Kathy Brady
"Excellent
coverage of issues currently undergoing change in
the field."
- Erica Tomlinson
"Not
only brilliant legal strategies, but cutting edge
learning techniques for really understanding and applying
them to make a difference."
- Ann Benson
"... the best course in the field."
- Faribourz Rouzbehani
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