California Penal Code did not Meet the Definition of Aggravated Felony

Clarification of CA9 held that the offense of. “Unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor” under California Penal Code does not meet the definition of “aggravated felony” in 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(A), which includes “sexual abuse of a minor.” Determination of the two offenses can be a case by case basis. The Ninth Circuit stated in Castillo-Rivera that a conviction under Penal Code 12021(a) may not constitute an aggravated felony because it covers those addicted to the use of any narcotic drug[,] 244 F.3d at 1022-23 (emphasis added). Both Penal Code 12021(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. 922(g) make it a crime for persons addicted to certain substances to possess a firearm, but the California prohibition is broader than the federal statute in two regards.

Definition of aggravated felony

— What it is, why it matters, and common examples

The immigration statute defines “aggravated felony” in INA §101(a)(43) (8 U.S.C. §1101(a)(43)). The list is long and intentionally broad — it includes specific crimes and many offense categories such as drug trafficking, theft, fraud, crimes of violence, document fraud, money laundering, and sexual offenses. 

Key points you must know

  • Statutory list: whether a conviction is an aggravated felony depends on the statute of conviction and caselaw interpretation. 
  • Not limited to felonies: misdemeanors or non-“aggravated” factual scenarios can still qualify under immigration law if the statute and sentence meet INA criteria.
  • Sentencing thresholds: many INA categories require minimum terms of imprisonment (for example, theft/burglary with a sentence of at least one year).

Immigration consequences

  • Aggravated-felony convictions carry harsh consequences: ineligibility for many forms of relief, deportability, and severe bars to reentry. 
  • They can also permanently affect naturalization and moral-character findings. 

How we evaluate convictions

  1. Perform the categorical / modified-categorical comparison between the conviction statute and INA §101(a)(43).
  2. Verify the exact sentence imposed and whether sentencing rules trigger INA thresholds. 
  3. Research BIA and circuit decisions applying the aggravated-felony categories to the conviction at issue. 

Common examples

Murder; rape; drug-trafficking offenses; certain firearms/explosives offenses; money laundering over $10,000; theft/burglary with prescribed sentence lengths; fraud with loss exceeding $10,000; alien-smuggling and document fraud in many contexts; attempts or conspiracies to commit such offenses. 

Client cautions & next steps

  • Obtain certified dispositions, plea agreements, and sentencing minutes for analysis.
  • Consult immigration counsel before pleading guilty — plea choices often determine immigration fate.
  • Where possible, explore post-conviction relief or vacatur to remove aggravated-felony consequences.

We perform conviction analyses, map precedent, advise on plea strategy, and pursue remedies (post-conviction, immigration motions) when appropriate. 

Definition of aggravated felony

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