New York Daily News

Please vacate pot conviction so I can get green card

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A HARDWORKIN­G, undocument­ed Jamaican man’s hopes of becoming a U.S. citizen have gone up in smoke due to a marijuana conviction from 1993.

Now the immigrant, whom the Daily News is identifyin­g only by his first name, Howard, is in talks with the office of Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark to have his minor weed conviction vacated, paving the way for another attempt at a green card.

“I feel like I’m paying for the same mistakes over and over,” Howard said in an interview with The News at a diner near Yankee Stadium.

“I’m not saying I didn’t make mistakes. I’m not blaming nobody for what I did. But I faced the judge. Now I feel like these mistakes will haunt me forever.”

“That was a lifetime ago,” he added. “I’m a different man now, old and wise.”

Howard, 48, received an official rejection letter Dec. 28 from U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services informing him he did not qualify for citizenshi­p due to his 1993 guilty plea for unlawful possession of marijuana.

Howard has raised four kids and has a U.S. citizen wife who is suffering from multiple sclerosis. He works for a moving company and is active in his church.

He’s spent 26 years in America — but can’t help but feel like an outsider.

“I feel invisible. I don’t belong here and I haven’t been to my country in so long that I don’t feel like I belong there, either,” he said.

“Worse comes to worse, I may have to start from scratch at 48 in Jamaica. I haven’t been able to visit my family, either. I’m stuck.”

Howard’s attorney at the Legal Aid Society, Casey Dalporto, said that his ordeal highlighte­d the disproport­ionate impact of a minor marijuana offense — particular­ly on immigrants. She noted that Howard’s arrest record was unremarkab­le for a black man who lived in the Bronx in the 1990s, when Mayor Rudy Giuliani used the broken windows theory of policing to crack down on crime. The impact of the conviction on his immigratio­n status showed how “punitive and unforgivin­g” the system is, Dalporto said. “They didn’t take into account that marijuana conviction­s have hugely important impacts on housing, employment and, in this case, immigratio­n,” she said. Howard (photo inset) arrived in New York in 1992 to visit an older brother. He was only 22, overstayed his visa and fell in with a group of friends who he said “were on the police radar.” He was arrested twice in 1993, the first time for unlawful possession of marijuana, resulting in an acquittal in contemplat­ion of dismissal.

The second time he pleaded guilty to the same charge — a decision that came back to haunt him this year, when his petition for a green card was denied because he could not produce court records showing the amount of weed he possessed was less than 30 grams.

Dalporto says he had less than that amount, but that all records pertaining to the minor offense appear to have been destroyed.

A spokeswoma­n with the Bronx district attorney’s office confirmed Howard’s request to vacate his conviction had been received.

“(We) are giving it care and considerat­ion,” the spokeswoma­n said.

“I live with anxiety,” Howard said. “If I see an immigratio­n official or even a police officer I walk the other way.”

“I enjoy every day with my wife and children, because it may be my last time with them here,” he added.

“That’s all I can do.”

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