A man who spent 43 years in prison before his conviction was overturned
now faces deportation
[October 30, 2025]
By MARYCLAIRE DALE
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — After waiting more than four decades to clear his
name in a friend’s 1980 killing, Subramanyam Vedam was set to walk free
from a Pennsylvania prison this month.
A judge in August threw out a murder conviction against Vedam in the
death of Thomas Kinser, finding new ballistics evidence that prosecutors
hadn't disclosed during his two trials. A lawyer called Vedam the victim
of a “profound injustice.”
But as his sister prepared to bring him home on Oct. 3, the thin,
white-haired Vedam was instead taken into federal custody over a 1999
deportation order. The 64-year-old, who legally came to the U.S. from
India when he was 9 months old, now faces another daunting legal fight.
Amid the Trump Administration's focus on mass deportations, Vedam's
lawyers must persuade an immigration court that a 1980s drug conviction
should be outweighed by the years he wrongly spent in prison. For a
time, immigration law allowed people who had reformed their lives to
seek such waivers. Vedam never pursued it then because of the murder
conviction.
“He was someone who’s suffered a profound injustice,” said immigration
lawyer Ava Benach. “(And) those 43 years aren’t a blank slate. He lived
a remarkable experience in prison.”
Vedam earned several degrees behind bars, tutored hundreds of fellow
inmates and went nearly half a century with just a single infraction,
involving rice brought in from the outside.
His lawyers hope immigration judges will consider the totality of his
case. The administration, in a brief filed Friday, opposes the effort.
So Vedam remains at an 1,800-bed U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement facility in central Pennsylvania.
“Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S,” a Department of
Homeland Security spokesperson said in an email about the case.

‘Mr. Vedam, where were you born?’
Vedam and Kinser were 19-year-old friends with parents on the Penn State
faculty when Kinser went missing. Vedam was the last person seen with
him. After his initial conviction was thrown out, Vedam faced an unusual
set of questions at his 1988 retrial.
“Mr. Vedam, where were you born?” Centre County District Attorney Ray
Gricar asked. “How frequently would you go back to India?
“During your teenage years, did you ever get into meditation?”
Gopal Balachandran, the Penn State Dickinson Law professor who won the
reversal, believes the questions were designed to alienate him from the
all-white jury, which returned a second guilty verdict.
The Vedams were among the first Indian families in the area known as
“Happy Valley,” where his father had come as a postdoctoral fellow in
1956. An older daughter was born in State College, but “Subu,” as he was
known, was born when the family was back in India in 1961.
They returned to State College for good before his first birthday, and
became the family that welcomed new members of the Indian diaspora to
town.

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Tejaswini Rao chats with party guests while Subramanyam and
Saraswathi Vedam embrace during their parents' wedding anniversary
party at State College, Pa., in August 1981. (Saraswathi Vedam via
AP)

“They were fully engaged. My father loved the university. My mother was
a librarian, and she helped start the library,” said the sister,
Saraswathi Vedam, 68, a midwifery professor in Vancouver, British
Columbia.
While she left for college in Massachusetts, Subu became swept up in the
counterculture of the late 1970s, growing his hair long and dabbling in
drugs while taking classes at Penn State.
One day in December 1980, Vedem asked Kinser for a ride to nearby
Lewisburg to buy drugs. Kinser was never seen again, although his van
was found outside his State College apartment. Nine months later, hikers
found his body in a wooded area miles away.
Vedam was detained on drug charges while police investigated, and was
ultimately charged with murder. He was convicted in 1983 and sentenced
to life without parole. To resolve the drug case, he pleaded no contest
to four counts of selling LSD and a theft charge. The 1988 retrial
offered no reprieve from his situation.
Although the defense long questioned the ballistics evidence in the
case, the jury, which heard that Vedam had bought a .25-caliber gun from
someone, never heard that an FBI report suggested the bullet wound was
too small to have been fired from that gun. Balachandran only found that
report as he dug into the case in 2023.
After hearings on the issue, a Centre County judge threw out the
conviction and the district attorney decided this month not to retry the
case.
Trump officials oppose the petition
Benach, the immigration lawyer, often represents clients trying to stay
in the U.S. despite an earlier infraction. Still, she finds the Vedam
case “truly extraordinary” given the constitutional violations involved.
“Forty-three years of wrongful imprisonment more than makes up for the
possession with intent to distribute LSD when he was 20 years old,” she
said.
Vedam could spend several more months in custody before the Board of
Immigration Appeals decides whether to reopen the case. ICE officials,
in a brief Friday, said the clock ran out years ago.
“He has provided no evidence nor argument to show he has been diligent
in pursuing his rights as it pertains to his immigration status,”
Katherine B. Frisch, an assistant chief counsel, wrote.
Saraswathi Vedam is saddened by the latest delay, but said her brother
remains patient.
“He, more than anybody else, knows that sometimes things don’t make
sense,” she said. “You have to just stay the course and keep hoping that
truth and justice and compassion and kindness will win.”
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