SEG Foundation helps give people opportunity for a 'clean slate'

People line up to get into the Delta Center during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit in Salt Lake City on Wednesday.

People line up to get into the Delta Center during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit in Salt Lake City on Wednesday. (Brice Tucker, Deseret News)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Hisrael "Izzy" Carranza overcame a troubled past with help from expungement services.
  • The SEG Foundation's Expungement Summit in Utah helped over 1,000 people clear records.
  • Utah's "clean slate law" aids automatic expungement, promoting second chances and dignity.

SALT LAKE CITY — A series of unfortunate events in his teenage years — his sister dying in a car accident, his parents separating, being bullied at school — left Hisrael "Izzy" Carranza not knowing how to cope.

In a search for belonging, he ended up joining a gang and using drugs. He was arrested for the first time as an adult at age 19. His criminal record included several misdemeanors and a felony for drug possession.

"Honestly, I knew what I was doing was wrong but I felt trapped in the negative cycle as is really common in the area where I grew up," he said of his Ogden neighborhood.

Sitting in jail, Carranza could see only two outcomes: death or a life of incarceration.

"I didn't know how, but I knew that I needed to change. Deciding to change is not easy. Sometimes doing the right thing is a lot harder. But I also knew that if I stayed the same, I was going to struggle anyway. So the choice was simple for me. I could either struggle to do something right with my life or I could struggle for nothing," he said.

Carranza enrolled in college, earning a bachelor's degree at Weber State University and a law degree from Gonzaga University in 2021. He clerked at the Washington State Supreme Court.

Returning to Utah, the 37-year-old married father of four knew his criminal record would be a barrier to obtaining a license to practice law in the state. That's when he found Rasa Legal, a fledgling public benefit corporation that helps people expunge their records.

In just under a year, Carranza was clear of his misdemeanors and felony.

"It's hard to capture what it means to me, but I can tell you this much: I now feel free, finally. I feel confident. I feel like my record results now reflect the person I am today and not the mistakes I made a long time ago," he said.

Carranza said he just learned that he's been admitted to the Utah Bar. He intends to focus on immigration law and cases for people who are in the same situation he found himself in.

Hisrael “Izzy” Carranza speaks to the media about how expungement positively changed his life during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Wednesday.
Hisrael “Izzy” Carranza speaks to the media about how expungement positively changed his life during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Wednesday. (Photo: Brice Tucker, Deseret News)

Carranza shared his story Wednesday at the Expungement Summit sponsored by the SEG Foundation, National Basketball Social Justice Coalition, Rasa Legal and Clean Slate Utah. Smith Entertainment Group, which owns the Utah Jazz and Utah Hockey Club, created the nonprofit foundation.

Nearly 1,500 people signed up to explore with 100 volunteer attorneys whether they're eligible to have their criminal records erased. The line to get into the arena stretched around the block.

On Thursday, the SEG Foundation announced that more than 2,300 people, including 861 walk-ins, attended the summit. Of those 1,059 were eligible to clear at least one record. Each person also received two tickets to a Utah Jazz or Utah Hockey Club game.

Among those who attended, 387 eligible individuals submitted paperwork to begin the expungement process, while dozens more who had previously started the process received free legal advice, according to SEG. Another 415 people obtained legal help to complete record expungement from start to finish. SEG expects the number of people who will benefit from the event to grow in the coming weeks.

The Utah Jazz were the first NBA team to partner with the National Basketball Social Justice Coalition on an expungement event in 2023. About 400 people showed up, 100 of whom were able to have their records cleared. James Cadogan, social justice coalition executive director, said the event believes in people and the group's job is to manifest hope and invest in people.

Second chances

Ashley Smith, Smith Entertainment Group co-founder, said the expungement event aligns with the company's mission to do good, provide opportunities for growth and help young people. Removing a criminal record, she said, has a ripple effect on families, children and communities.

"My personal experience is just that I've been forgiven and given second chances a million times in my life. I'm so thankful for the version of myself that I am today because we forgive and move on and we get to grow and we get to be better and we get to improve," she told the Deseret News.

Ashley Smith, co-founder of Smith Entertainment Group, speaks to the media during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Wednesday.
Ashley Smith, co-founder of Smith Entertainment Group, speaks to the media during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Wednesday. (Photo: Brice Tucker, Deseret News)

"It's just I'm thankful every time somebody forgives me for a mishap, so it's very personal to me that we help each other in that way and we champion each other. ... I don't think we just believe in second chances. I think we create them in Utah."

About one-quarter of Utahns of every race, gender, educational achievement and economic status have a criminal record, according to Destiny Garcia, executive director of Clean Slate Utah, an organization that helps people expunge their records.

A criminal record, even one with a decades-old misdemeanor or arrest that never led to a conviction, can prevent a person from getting a job, housing, education, professional license or even a loan.

"No one should be defined by their past. And mistakes should never be the permanent barrier to success. They also should never be a life sentence to poverty," Garcia said. "Expungement is more than just clearing records. It's about giving people back their human dignity."

People line up to get into the Delta Center during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit in Salt Lake City on Wednesday.
People line up to get into the Delta Center during the 2025 Utah Expungement Summit in Salt Lake City on Wednesday. (Photo: Brice Tucker, Deseret News)

Clean slate laws

Utah was the second state in the country to pass a "clean slate law," which provides automatic expungement for certain low-level misdemeanors and felonies after a specified period of time. A dozen states now have such laws.

Most states have a petition-based expungement process through the court system, but it's typically so complicated and costly that an estimated 90% of people who are eligible for relief never make it through the paperwork. Two law professors at the University of Michigan found that just 6.5% of people in Michigan who qualify clear their records within five years of becoming eligible.

Read the full article at Deseret.com.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Dennis Romboy, Deseret NewsDennis Romboy
Dennis Romboy is an editor and reporter for the Deseret News. He has covered a variety of beats over the years, including state and local government, social issues and courts. A Utah native, Romboy earned a degree in journalism from the University of Utah. He enjoys cycling, snowboarding and running.
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