Crime & Safety
Colorado Immigrants: Deals With Prosecutors Can Mean Deportation
Proposed legislation would allow non-citizens to petition for cleared convictions.

DENVER, CO – By Alex Burness for The Colorado Independent. Here’s a process that plays out hundreds of times every year in Colorado: A person is charged with a low-level crime such as simple drug possession or petty theft. A prosecutor offers that person a deal in which the defendant pleads guilty, successfully completes their sentence — say, a couple years of probation and maybe a rehabilitation class — and their case is dismissed. The record of it will be sealed at the end of the probationary period.
But there is one group for whom the process — known as deferred judgment — comes with a catch. For non-citizens, those here legally and illegally alike, deferred judgment does not clear the legal slate. For this group, the same guilty plea can, years or decades later, mean a denial of citizenship or deportation.
“What I learned time and time again,” said Sen. Julie Gonzales, a first-year Democratic legislator who worked for six years as a paralegal for the immigration law firm of Hans Meyer, “is that the people who actually have done everything the criminal justice system had asked of them were the folks who had no remedy available to them.”
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Last week at the Capitol, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 3-2 to advance a bill from Gonzales that aims to sidestep this conflict between state law and federal immigration policy.
The remedy she’s proposed would allow non-citizens who’ve successfully completed deferred judgments to petition to have their guilty pleas withdrawn. It’s a roundabout way to effectively dismiss their convictions as the state already does with many others.
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“We recognize that any contact (with the criminal justice system), however exceedingly minor it may be, can cause lasting consequences to defendants,” Gonzales said, adding that the bill is “rooted in my experiences working with clients who were facing these particularly draconian immigration consequences.”
Meyer and other immigration attorneys and advocates already tried to solve this problem in court. Meyer argued before the Colorado Court of Appeals in 2014 that his client Jose Espino-Paez, a Colorado non-citizen who’d accepted a deferred judgment, was not informed by his lawyer at the time that pleading guilty could detail his application for legal residency. Meyer told the court that Espino-Paez should be able to withdraw his plea.
But the Court of Appeals in ruled 4-2 against Espino-Paez. He appealed to the Colorado Supreme Court, which in 2017 found that it did not have the authority to rule on the matter.
Gonzales’ bill, in essence, seeks to give state courts that authority.
READ MORE in The Colorado Independent
Julie Gonzales, pictured here at the Democrats' Election Day party in November, is running a bill that she says will provide some relief to non-citizens burdened by prior convictions. (Photo by John Herrick)