My former Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu coach and I are embroiled in a legal dispute. To hide drug trafficking in the school, he sought a domestic violence injunction against me. To obtain this injunction, he falsely reported me, had his pupil lie to the police, and falsely arrested me. In essence, he is saying that I threatened to murder his relatives. In 2005, he was charged with domestic violence. He was given custody of their child after being found guilty in 2019 of aggravated stalking of his ex-girlfriend. Another female student filed a stalking injunction against him this year. He has no concrete evidence to support his assertion that I am in violation of the injunction, which is perpetual.
First, how can an injunction based on a wrongful conviction and false arrest be legitimate? Plea bargaining was used to conceal the erroneous arrest. My second query is if he can obtain a green card given his record. He was recently deposed by my public defender, who questioned him about his legal status. He responded that he had a green card and was in the country lawfully. Since all of these are deportable felonies and, based on my study, aggravated stalking is an aggravated felony, I'm curious how. He would not be eligible for a green card due to an aggravated crime. Am I correct? Would he face perjury charges?
This is from: dcochran
Many thanks.
First, how can an injunction based on a wrongful conviction and false arrest be legitimate? Plea bargaining was used to conceal the erroneous arrest. My second query is if he can obtain a green card given his record. He was recently deposed by my public defender, who questioned him about his legal status. He responded that he had a green card and was in the country lawfully. Since all of these are deportable felonies and, based on my study, aggravated stalking is an aggravated felony, I'm curious how. He would not be eligible for a green card due to an aggravated crime. Am I correct? Would he face perjury charges?
This is from: dcochran
Many thanks.