Beyond Borders, United States

Documented Immigrants Should Not Be Deported For Minor Drug Infractions, Supreme Court Says

June 16, 2010 By Alison Bowen
A marijuana plant.

A marijuana plant.

Documented immigrants should not be deported for minor drug possession convictions, the Supreme Court ruled this week.

The case centered on Jose Carachuri-Rosendo, a Texas man who was a legal immigrant when he was slated for deportation after pleading guilty to minor drug charges.

Carachuri-Rosendo, who was a lawful permanent resident with a wife and four children, was convicted of having a marijuana cigarette and a Xanax pill.

The two convictions had a combined 30-day sentence, and he was deported.

His lawyers argued that he was caught in a harsh web from a 1996 immigration law allowing the deportation of immigrants convicted of an “aggravated felony.” What subsequently qualified as a felony was vague and sometimes included drug convictions.

The Los Angeles Times reported that the Supreme Court ruled only serious or violent criminals should be removed.

The 9-0 decision means that all non-citizens living in the United States will not be automatically deported for minor drug convictions.

Justice John Paul Stevens wrote the opinion, saying that automatic deportation wasn’t what Congress had intended with the 1996 law, reported the Washington Post.

Also last week, the federal government announced a 10 percent increase in immigration document fees, The New York Times reported

Fewer applications to apply for documents like green cards spurred a need for increased revenue, Alejandro Mayorkas, Citizenship and Immigration Services director, told The Times.

Applying for a green card will now cost $985, from $930. The fee for immigrants to become U.S. citizens won’t change.

Image: Dey @ Flickr.

About Alison Bowen

Alison is a Missouri native and New York City freelance writer who has wanted to cover Latin America since studying Spanish in Central America. After moving to Brooklyn, her work has appeared in The New York Times, the Daily News, the Manhattan Times and Women’s eNews. She earned a master’s degree in journalism and Latin American and Caribbean studies at New York University. Her thesis focused on immigration policies after September 11, including counterterrorism measures, and their effects on the daily lives of immigrants in New York City.

2 Comments

[…] Documented immigrants should not be deported for minor drug infractions, the Supreme Court says. Read more at Alison Bowen’s “Beyond Borders” blog. […]

[…] Read Alison Bowen’s new piece, “Documented Immigrants Should Not Be Deported For Minor Drug Infractions, Supreme Court Says.&… […]

Comments are closed.