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Reading: After 43 Years Behind Bars for a Crime He Didn’t Commit, Indian-Origin Man Wins Reprieve from US Deportation
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Untitle Media > Blog > World News > After 43 Years Behind Bars for a Crime He Didn’t Commit, Indian-Origin Man Wins Reprieve from US Deportation
World News

After 43 Years Behind Bars for a Crime He Didn’t Commit, Indian-Origin Man Wins Reprieve from US Deportation

Aimee
Posted Aimee
Updated 2025/11/04
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8 Min Read

US Courts Halt Deportation of Indian-Origin Man Wrongfully Jailed for 43 Years


In a landmark decision that underscores both tragedy and resilience, two US courts have halted the deportation of Subramanyam “Subu” Vedam, an Indian-origin man who spent more than four decades behind bars for a murder he did not commit. Vedam, now 64, was wrongfully imprisoned for 43 years before his conviction was overturned earlier this year — only to find himself once again in government custody, this time under threat of deportation.


Vedam, who arrived in the United States when he was just nine months old, has spent virtually his entire life in the country. Despite being a legal permanent resident, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained him immediately after his release from prison in October, citing a decades-old minor drug conviction.


He is currently being held at a detention facility in Louisiana, which notably includes an airstrip used for deportations, according to the Associated Press.


Courts Step In to Pause Deportation


Last week, Vedam’s legal team secured a temporary reprieve from deportation after two separate courts intervened.


An immigration judge granted a stay order, allowing Vedam to remain in the US while the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) reviews whether to reopen his case — a process that could take months.


On the same day, a federal district court in Pennsylvania also issued a directive halting any deportation proceedings until further notice.


His attorneys argue that deporting a man wrongfully imprisoned for 43 years — and who has no living family in India — would amount to a profound moral and legal failure.


A Conviction Built on Circumstantial Evidence


Vedam’s ordeal began in 1982, when he was arrested for the murder of his friend Thomas Kinser, who had gone missing two years earlier. Kinser’s body was discovered nine months after his disappearance, in a wooded area near their hometown. Vedam, then a teenager, was the last person seen with him.


In 1983, he was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole, along with an additional two-to-five-year sentence for a minor drug offence.


There was no direct evidence linking Vedam to the crime — no witnesses, no motive, and no forensic proof. Over the years, his defense attorneys repeatedly pointed out that the conviction rested solely on speculation and circumstantial claims.


Inside Pennsylvania’s correctional facilities, Vedam rebuilt his life with remarkable resolve. He earned three academic degrees, became a teacher and mentor to fellow inmates, and maintained his innocence throughout his incarceration. His parents, who had tirelessly campaigned for his release, both passed away before witnessing his exoneration — his father in 2009 and his mother in 2016.

Justice at Last — and a New Battle Begins


Vedam’s decades-long fight for justice finally bore fruit in August 2024, when a Pennsylvania court overturned his murder conviction. His attorneys uncovered ballistics evidence that prosecutors had suppressed for decades — evidence that directly contradicted the state’s original case against him.


Following the ruling, Vedam was released on October 3, 2024, after spending 43 years and seven months in prison. His family and supporters described the moment as bittersweet — a man wrongfully caged for most of his life was finally free, only to be detained again.


Within hours of his release, ICE officers took him into custody, citing the decades-old drug conviction as grounds for deportation under federal immigration law. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has maintained that the reversal of his murder conviction does not nullify his prior drug-related sentence.


Vedam’s sister and legal team argue that after losing most of his life to a miscarriage of justice, he deserves protection and a path to full citizenship — not another punishment.


“He’s an American in Every Way That Matters”


Speaking to reporters, Vedam’s sister said her brother’s life has been “a testament to endurance.”


“He came here as a baby, grew up here, studied here, worked here — this is his home,” she said. “After 43 years of wrongful imprisonment, how can you deport someone who’s already suffered more than anyone should?”


Civil rights activists and legal experts have also criticised ICE’s decision, calling for reforms to prevent similar injustices. They argue that Vedam’s case highlights the intersection of flawed criminal justice and rigid immigration policy — a system that often continues to punish even those who have been proven innocent.


For now, the courts’ intervention has given Subramanyam Vedam a temporary reprieve. But his ultimate fate — whether he will finally be allowed to live freely in the only country he has ever called home — still rests in the hands of the Board of Immigration Appeals.


After 43 years of wrongful imprisonment, the question that remains is not whether Vedam belongs in America, but whether America will choose justice over bureaucracy.

Aimee November 4, 2025
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