Should a legal immigrant be deported over a sock? No, said seven justices of the Supreme Court, who agreed that the government shouldn’t have deported a Tunisian math professor who was found with four Adderall pills in his sock.
In 2010, Moones Mellouli was convicted for possessing drug paraphernalia, a misdemeanor charge in Kansas, where he was arrested. The paraphernalia in question was the sock, which was found after Mellouli was briefly jailed for driving under the influence with a suspended license. Two years later, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers arrested him, saying that because he had been convicted of a drug charge, he had lost his right to stay in the country. But in an opinion by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the court held on Monday that the law in question “did not authorize Mellouli’s removal.” His Kansas charging document did not reveal which controlled substance he had allegedly possessed, and not all substances banned by Kansas are banned under federal law.
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