The Supreme Court has dealt a blow to U.S. immigration officials in a closely watched case by ruling that a broad state anti-drug law may not be enough to justify deportation.
By a 7-2 vote, the court ruled that a Tunisian man convicted of carrying pills in his sock should not have been removed from the U.S. for that reason.
The case involves Moones Mellouli, who arrived in the country on a student visa and earned bachelor's and master's degrees from American schools. He went on to teach math at the University of Missouri. But after police arrested him in Kansas for driving under the influence five years ago, they found four orange tablets hidden in his sock.
Mellouli eventually pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor charge for possessing drug paraphernalia, with the sock being the paraphernalia. U.S. authorities determined that was enough to deport him.
Government lawyer Rachel Kovner acknowledged the unusual facts in the case at oral argument this year.
"Strange feature of this case is that it involves an item that's not usually thought of as drug paraphernalia," Kovner said. "The classic paraphernalia items ... are things like hypodermic needles and scales and substances used to mix with drugs before sale."
But Jon Laramore, a lawyer for Mellouli, argued the government was stretching the law.
"Possession of paraphernalia is not a federal offense," Laramore told the justices. "One cannot be prosecuted federally for possessing drug paraphernalia."
And in order to deport someone, Laramore said, the U.S. needs to show the drug at issue is on the federal Controlled Substances list.
"The government wants any drug conviction to be a deportable offense even if it's clearly for a non-federal drug," and that can't be right, he argued.
The Supreme Court ruled that Mellouli's conviction should not trigger deportation.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who wrote for the court majority, said his crime should not be considered enough to remove someone from the country under federal law.
And about those pills hidden in Mellouli's sock? They turned out to be Adderall, a drug that's popular on campuses to help students stay awake.
That point was not lost on Justice Elena Kagan, a former law school dean, during oral argument.
"He had four pills of Adderall, which if you go to half the colleges in America people, you know, and just randomly pick somebody, there would be a decent chance," Kagan said to laughter in the courtroom.
In dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote he sees "nothing absurd about removing individuals who are unwilling to respect the drug laws" where they live.
As for Mellouli, his lawyer said he's "thrilled" at the ruling and he hopes to return to the U.S.
Transcript
MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:
The Supreme Court has dealt a blow to U.S. immigration officials in a closely watched case by ruling that a sock is not drug paraphernalia. By a 7 to 2 vote, the court ruled that a Tunisian man convicted of carrying pills in a sock should not have been removed from the U.S. for that reason. NPR's Carrie Johnson reports.
CARRIE JOHNSON, BYLINE: Moones Mellouli earned bachelors and masters degrees from American schools. He went on to teach math at the University of Missouri. But after police arrested him in Kansas for driving under the influence five years ago, they found four orange tablets hidden in his sock. Mellouli eventually pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor charge for possessing drug paraphernalia, with the sock being the paraphernalia, and U.S. authorities argued that was enough to deport him. Government lawyer Rachel Kovner acknowledged the unusual facts in the case at oral argument this year.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
RACHEL KOVNER: A strange feature of this case is that it involves an item that's not usually thought of as drug paraphernalia. The classic paraphernalia items are things like hypodermic needles and scales and substances that are used to mix with drugs before sale.
JOHNSON: But Jon Laramore, a lawyer for Mellouli, argued the government was stretching the law.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
JON LARAMORE: Possession of paraphernalia is not a federal offense. One cannot be prosecuted federally for possessing drug paraphernalia.
JOHNSON: And in order to deport someone, Laramore said, the U.S. needs to show the drug at issue is on the federal controlled substances list.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
LARAMORE: The government wants any drug conviction to be a deportable offense, even if it's clearly for a nonfederal drug.
JOHNSON: The Supreme Court, in a 7 to 2 decision, rejected that notion and ruled Mellouli's conviction should not trigger deportation. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said his crime should not be considered enough to remove someone from the country under federal law. And about those pills hidden in Mellouli's sock - they turned out to be Adderall, a drug that's popular on campuses to help students stay awake. That point was not lost on Justice Elena Kagan, a former law school dean, talking here at oral argument.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
ELENA KAGAN: He had four pills of Adderall, which, if you go to half the colleges in America, people, you know - and just randomly picked somebody, there would be a decent chance.
JOHNSON: In dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote he sees, quote, "nothing absurd about removing individuals who are unwilling to respect the drug laws where they live." As for Mellouli, his lawyer said he's thrilled at the ruling, and he hopes to return to the U.S. Carrie Johnson, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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