After more than four decades of wrongful imprisonment for a murder he didn’t commit, Subramanyam Vedam’s long-awaited freedom was tragically cut short when he was immediately taken into federal immigration custody. Now, the 64-year-old, who has lived in the U.S. since infancy, faces deportation based on a 1999 order and an old drug conviction, sparking outrage and a fierce legal fight for his right to stay in the only home he has ever known.
In a story that highlights profound injustices within the American legal system, Subramanyam Vedam, also known as “Subu,” spent 43 years incarcerated for a 1980 murder he did not commit. His recent exoneration was supposed to mark the end of a harrowing ordeal, but instead, it initiated a new, equally daunting battle: a fight against deportation by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
A Life Interrupted: The 1980 Murder and Wrongful Conviction
Subramanyam Vedam and Thomas Kinser were both 19-year-old children of Penn State University faculty, growing up in the close-knit community of “Happy Valley.” In December 1980, Vedam asked Kinser for a ride to buy drugs, and Kinser was never seen again. His body was found nine months later in a wooded area, with a bullet wound in his skull. Vedam, who was the last person seen with Kinser, was subsequently charged with murder.
Vedam was twice convicted of killing Kinser, first in 1983 and again in a 1988 retrial, despite a notable lack of witnesses or clear motive. During his 1988 retrial, the Centre County District Attorney, Ray Gricar, posed unusual questions, inquiring about Vedam’s birthplace in India, his frequency of visits, and whether he practiced meditation during his teenage years. Gopal Balachandran, the Penn State law professor who later secured the reversal, believed these questions were designed to alienate Vedam from the all-white jury, contributing to his second guilty verdict. For more details on the initial conviction and the subsequent legal battle, see this report by The Associated Press.
The Truth Emerges: Ballistics Evidence and Exoneration
The defense had long questioned the ballistics evidence in the case. However, it wasn’t until 2023 that Professor Balachandran uncovered a critical FBI report. This report indicated that the bullet wound was too small to have been fired from the .25-caliber gun Vedam was alleged to have purchased—a crucial piece of evidence that prosecutors had never disclosed to the defense.
After hearings on this new evidence, a Centre County judge officially threw out the conviction in August 2025. The district attorney’s office decided not to pursue another trial, finally clearing Vedam’s name after 43 years of wrongful imprisonment.
Freedom Denied: Immediate Detention by ICE
The relief of exoneration was tragically short-lived. On October 3, 2025, the very day he was set to walk free from a Pennsylvania prison, Vedam was instead taken into federal custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). His detention was based on a 1999 deportation order, which stemmed from a 1980s drug conviction where he pleaded no contest to four counts of selling LSD and a theft charge.
Vedam, who legally arrived in the U.S. from India at nine months old, has not lived in India since infancy. His family, including his niece Zoë Miller-Vedam, notes his strong ties to Pennsylvania. “We tease him that he has more of a Philadelphia accent than anything else, because that’s the only way he’s ever spoken,” Miller-Vedam told People Magazine. An ICE spokesperson, Jason Koontz, asserted that Vedam is a “career criminal” and would be held for removal. However, Vedam’s immigration lawyer, Ava Benach, described the case as “truly extraordinary,” emphasizing that 43 years of wrongful imprisonment should outweigh a drug conviction from when he was 20 years old.
A Remarkable Life Behind Bars and Enduring Family Support
Despite the immense injustice, Vedam’s time in prison was not a “blank slate,” as his lawyer Ava Benach noted. He earned several degrees, tutored hundreds of fellow inmates, and maintained an exemplary record with only a single minor infraction over nearly half a century. His sister, Saraswathi Vedam, a midwifery professor in Vancouver, British Columbia, recounts the family’s deep roots in the U.S. Their father came as a postdoctoral fellow in 1956, and their mother was a librarian who helped start the local library, becoming a welcoming family for the Indian diaspora in State College.
Saraswathi expressed her sorrow at the latest delay, but reiterated her brother’s patience. “He, more than anybody else, knows that sometimes things don’t make sense,” she said. “You have to just stay with stay the course and keep hoping that truth and justice and compassion and kindness will win.”
The Broader Implications: Immigration Policy and Justice Reform
Vedam’s case has ignited significant discussion about the intersection of immigration policy and criminal justice. His lawyers argue that the 43 years of wrongful imprisonment should unequivocally outweigh his decades-old drug conviction, especially as immigration law once allowed waivers for individuals who had reformed their lives—a path Vedam could not pursue due to the murder conviction. However, the current administration, notably amid the Trump administration’s focus on mass deportation, opposes such efforts.
A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson stated, “Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S.,” reflecting a strict stance that critics argue overlooks individual circumstances and profound injustices. This case underscores the challenges faced by individuals navigating complex immigration laws, particularly when compounded by systemic failures in the justice system. The Board of Immigration Appeals will ultimately decide whether to reopen Vedam’s case, a decision that could take several more months.