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How a Court Ruled on Expunging Convictions for the Rehabilitated

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Michelle Toh
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August 12, 2016, 3:13 AM ET
Museum Of London Previews The Met Crime Museum Uncovered Exhibition
LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 07: A firearm and criminal record belonging to Ronnie Kray displayed at the "Met Crime Museum Uncovered" exhibition on October 7, 2015 in London, England. Running from October 9, 2015 until April 10, 2016, the exhibition will display never seen before objects from the Metropolitan Police's Crime Museum, which until now has only been open to staff and invited guests. (Photo by Ben Pruchnie/Getty Images)Ben Pruchnie — Getty Images
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Federal judges cannot expunge convictions from people’s criminal records even when it prevents those who have been rehabilitated from getting jobs, and Congress should consider granting the judiciary that power, a U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York overturned a May 2015 ruling that expunged the records of a 2001 conviction of a woman who spent years struggling to hold down jobs because of it.

Circuit Judge Raymond Lohier called the situation “unfortunate” for the woman, known in court records as Jane Doe, and noted Congress has occasionally let judges give one-time criminal defendants a clean bill of health.

“It might consider doing so again for certain offenders who, like Doe, want and deserve to have their criminal convictions expunged after a period of successful rehabilitation,” he wrote.

See also: Judge Rules General Mills Must Face Lawsuit Over Cheerios Protein Claims

The decision reversed a ruling by former U.S. District Judge John Gleeson in Brooklyn. It came amid growing attention to ensuring that people with criminal records are treated fairly when seeking employment and trying to rebuild their lives.

Noam Biale, Doe’s lawyer, called the decision “especially unfortunate, given the broad consensus that collateral consequences of criminal convictions are unduly harsh, do not enhance public safety, and keep good people like Jane Doe out of the workforce.”

See also: Valeant Executives May Be Facing Criminal Prosecution

U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, in an April speech, said criminal defendants who have served their punishments too often “continue to be punished for past mistakes” through hurdles to secure student loans, driver’s licenses and housing.

The Justice Department, which opposed expunging Doe’s record, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

For more on legal battles, watch Fortune’s video:

 

Jane Doe was a single mother and home health aide who in 1997 was a passenger in a staged car accident in an automobile insurance fraud scheme.

A federal jury in Brooklyn convicted her in 2001, and she was sentenced the next year to five years of probation and 10 months of home detention.

In subsequent years, Doe had trouble maintaining employment in the health care field because of the conviction. After landing some jobs, she was fired after employers conducted background checks, according to court papers.

Gleeson ordered her conviction expunged, saying the public’s interest in her contributing to society outweighed its interest in her conviction being a matter of public record.

“I sentenced her to five years of probation supervision, not to a lifetime of unemployment,” he wrote.

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