The Norwalk Hour

Feds agree to honor Connecticu­t pardons, stop deportatio­ns

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HARTFORD — Federal officials have agreed to recognize Connecticu­t pardons as legally valid again and stop deporting people who have been pardoned for their crimes by a state board, reversing a hard-line stance taken by the Trump administra­tion, authoritie­s announced Friday.

Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong said the department­s of Justice and Homeland Security under Trump had abandoned six decades of practice by singling out Connecticu­t and refusing to acknowledg­e its pardons — because they are issued by a board instead of the governor.

Five other states — Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, South Carolina and Utah — have similar pardon systems, but the federal government did not stop recognizin­g their pardons, Tong said. The five states are more conservati­ve than liberal Connecticu­t.

Several Connecticu­t residents who were pardoned suddenly got swept up into deportatio­n proceeding­s and detained.

Tong’s office filed legal challenges to the federal government’s refusal to recognize the state’s pardons and prevailed in the courts.

“This agreement affirms, with full force of law, what we have known to be true for well over a century — Connecticu­t’s pardons are legitimate and lawful,” Tong, a Democrat, said in a statement. “There was no reason for the federal government ever to single out Connecticu­t and deny our residents the second chance we chose to grant to them.”

Messages seeking comment were left with Justice and Homeland Security officials. The U.S. attorney’s office in Connecticu­t, which also is part of the settlement, referred questions to the Justice Department.

Federal officials had previously agreed to start recognizin­g Connecticu­t’s pardons again in 2020 after Tong sued the federal agencies. But the Department of Homeland Security did not grant final approval to that deal and continued to refuse to honor the state’s pardons, Tong said.

Two Connecticu­t residents pardoned by the state, Wayzaro Walton and Richard Thompson, were detained in federal deportatio­n proceeding­s and later released after Tong’s office won legal challenges.

In 2019, the Board of Immigratio­n Appeals terminated deportatio­n proceeding­s for Walton, after ruling her pardon was valid. The Hartford resident, who came to the U.S. from England when she was 4, was detained for nearly eight months as federal officials tried to deport her. She had been a legal U.S. citizen for 25 years until she lost her legal status in 2012 over larceny charges.

In 2020, a federal appeals court reversed a decision by immigratio­n authoritie­s to deport Thompson because he was convicted of felony assault 19 years before when he was 18, despite his state pardon.

Thompson, who lived in Bridgeport, came to the U.S. from Jamaica in 1997 when he was 14 to live with his father, who is a U.S. citizen.

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? State Attorney General William Tong said federal officials’ agreement to honor the state’s pardons affirms they are “legitimate and lawful.”
Jessica Hill / Associated Press State Attorney General William Tong said federal officials’ agreement to honor the state’s pardons affirms they are “legitimate and lawful.”

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