Boston Man With Pending Green Card Application Held in ICE Custody for 5 Months
Seamus Culleton was detained despite being married to a U.S. citizen and having a work authorization permit. Now he’s asking the Irish government for help.
On Monday, an Irish national called into Ireland's RTE Radio from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in El Paso, Texas, and asked the Irish prime minister to intervene in his case. Seamus Culleton has been in ICE detention for five months despite having work authorization, a pending green card application, and no criminal history.
Culleton entered the U.S. legally in 2009 on a visa waiver program and overstayed the visa's 90-day limit, according to The Guardian. After marrying his wife, Tiffany Smyth, he applied for lawful permanent residence and obtained a valid work permit, his lawyer, Ogor Winnie Okoye, told The Guardian. But that didn't stop immigration agents from arresting him, Culleton told RTE's Liveline.
Culleton told Liveline that he was returning home after returning items to a Home Depot on September 9 when he noticed a suspicious car following him. After a few minutes, the car flashed blue lights to pull him over, and agents quickly surrounded him. Culleton said he complied with officers and explained that he is married to a U.S. citizen, has a marriage-based petition in place, and has a work permit. "None of that mattered," he said. "They cuffed me and took me away."
After his arrest, Culleton said agents pressured him to sign deportation papers and are "tricking a lot of non-English speakers into doing this, for sure," he told Liveline. But, Culleton said he didn't sign anything. "I wasn't going to sign my rights away, my life away. Why would I do that?" he said.
Culleton was eventually flown over 2,000 miles away from his wife to a detention facility in El Paso, Texas. Culleton described the conditions at the facility as "horrible," including "filthy" bathrooms, limited meals and time outside, and a fear of the staff who are "capable of anything." Culleton is detained in the same facility where a 55-year-old Cuban immigrant's death was ruled a homicide in an autopsy report, citing allegations that guards had allegedly choked and asphyxiated the detainee.
During the Liveline interview, Culleton asked the Irish government for help in ending his detention "ASAP." "It's an absolute torture, a psychological torture, physical torture," he said. "I just want to get back to my wife. We're so desperate to start a family."
Because of his prolonged detention, Culleton was forced to miss his final green card interview appointment scheduled in October, Okoye told The Guardian. Although he was initially approved for release in November on a $4,000 bond, which his wife paid, his bond was later denied, reports Newsweek. When his attorney appealed, ICE agents claimed Culleton had signed documents agreeing to his deportation while in Buffalo, something Culleton told Liveline that he "absolutely" did not do.
When asked about his detention, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to Reason that after failing to depart the U.S. and receiving full due process, Culleton "was issued a final order of removal by an immigration judge on September 10," just one day after his arrest. "He was offered a chance to instantly be removed to Ireland but chose to stay in ICE custody, in fact he took affirmative steps to remain in detention," McLaughlin continued, and noted that "a pending green card application and work authorization does not give someone legal status to be in our country."
Culleton's Liveline interview was successful in grabbing the attention of Irish politicians. In a statement, Ireland's Department of Foreign Affairs said the Minister "is aware of [Culleton's] case," and that the "embassy in Washington, DC, is also engaging directly with the [DHS] at a senior level," reports The Independent. And Ireland's Labour leader, Ivana Bacik, called for Prime Minister Micheál Martin to secure Culleton's release immediately.
Culleton's case shows the ongoing disjointed nature of President Donald Trump's immigration policy. Rather than arresting and deporting the "worst of the worst," the Trump administration has arrested and removed immigrants like Culleton who have no criminal record and who have lived and worked in the U.S. peacefully for years. This approach is just one reason why many Americans feel Trump's immigration enforcement campaign has gone too far.
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"We'll take the niggers and the chinks. But we don't want the Irish!"
But he isnt even brown. I thought trump just hated brown people!
It's almost like he can't legally live in the US without a green card.
..and overstayed the visa's 90-day limit,
There’s the problem right there.
Not according to Autumn Billings apparently
Hey, do you want a society based on laws or based on emotions?
Uh...WHOSE emotions?
I'm glad they put that near the top instead of burying it 6 paragraphs down or something.
Does it really matter where they put it if they ignore it?
And didn't bother doing anything about it until Trump started his second term.
Yeah, he's an illegal immigrant who has been defying our laws for over a decade. He can go back. I'll grant that an Irish immigrant is more culturally similar than one from Somalia, but even that (and skin color) is irrelevant since he is here illegally.
Can Reason produce a sympathetic "victim" or at the least one who isn't just facing the consequences of his actions.
That’s where I stopped reading.
He was probably drunk the whole 90 days. That's a legal defense in Ireland.
True. They only sober up to beat their wives.
entered the U.S. legally in 2009 on a visa waiver program and overstayed the visa's 90-day limit,
This is literally all that matters.
Remember in 86 when democrats promised a visa exit system in exchange for amnesty?
Gotta love the framing of "Boston man" as well. Where he is illegally residing isn't really relevant. If she was honest she'd describe him as an Irish national.
“If she was honest”
HA!
Autumn, you have to be faster than this. We already know the story.
Seamus was in the country illegally for 20 years. Then all of a sudden he got 'married' and applied for residency less than a year ago. The work ler.it is irrelevant because it was a temporary authorization while waiting for his application to be processed.
His application was processed - and denied.
And he does have a 20 year long history of identity theft. Unless someone else was paying his bills for the last two decades he was working under someone else's name.
Do we agree that lawbreakers should be punished?
Depends. If they hate Trump they supposed to get a pass.
"Our law-breaking is speech, your very existence should be illegal!"
- said by the AWFL with a "No person is illegal" yard sign.
I'm sure there are wide differences of opinion here about what laws should be enforced. It's something people who identify as libertarian argue about all the time.
We agree that you’re a piece of shit, shrike.
'Boston Man'?
(Credit: Tricia Kovacev via GoFundMe)
Wonder how much money the white illegals are raking in?
More than food truck owners?
The Irish are famous for inventing boiled meat. Their food trucks have limited appeal.
Don’t forget potatoes!
But waaaaaay less than Somali learing center owners.
If he did not have a final order of removal he should not be detained.
If you overstay your visa, you can be detained.
Literally last week I gave you the fucking appeals case saying youre full of shit Tony.
I hope you get raped, and then we can excuse the perp for humanitarian reasons.
How long is a 60-day visa good for?
I'm betting less than 17 years.
You violate the terms of an agreement you agreed to, you suffer the consequences.
Fuck off commie scum.
An honest headline would say "man who overstayed visa held in ICE custody".
Welcome to Reason
Sadly it's not just Reason.
>After marrying his wife, Tiffany Smyth, he applied for lawful permanent residence and obtained a valid work permit
We will, of course, fail to notice that you do not specify the time lapse between 'overstaying his visa' and his marriage. Which is 17 years.
I noticed that. When an immigrant's 90 day visa story starts when my adult daughter was a toddler, my first thought is "hmm...".
Culleton's Liveline interview was successful in grabbing the attention of Irish politicians. In a statement, Ireland's Department of Foreign Affairs said the Minister "is aware of [Culleton's] case," and that the "embassy in Washington, DC, is also engaging directly with the [DHS] at a senior level,"
So the Irish don't want him back...
Jokes aside, every time someone accused me of hating 'brown people' because I thought our border meant something, I always responded with, "It's the Irish I'd like to see deported." Looks like someone upstairs was listening.
What the fuck business is it of the Irish?
It is our country.
>>overstayed the visa's 90-day limit
all the cute pics & feelz in the world will not overcome this.
A dude from Ireland? See they are targeting muslims
icwydt ...
Culleton has called the detention conditions in El Paso, Texas, “a modern-day concentration camp” and says he fears for his life.
Please let me stay in your concentration camp-having country!
He is always free to go home if he wants to avoid a concentration camp.
He is choosing to demand a court hearing and, hey, they take time.
So they got the wrong guy?
This dude could self deport if the Irish will take him and take his wife with him if they'll take her. The underlying claim here is that Ireland should have some jurisdiction over US immigration law because he's like a really nice fella. This is just bizarre. Absent a presidential pardon he's here illegally and he's going home.
Remember all those previous stories here at Reason, where an immigrant who overstayed his/her visa for X number of years was picked up by ICE and deported? You all would typically say "well, the guy had X years to try to fix his immigration problem, why didn't he do that? No sympathy!" Now here is a guy who DID try to fix his immigration problem, by going through the proper procedures, and you all, unsurprisingly, don't really care. You still want him to go.
The irrational faction here is the one who treats the crime of 'illegal entry', or the action of overstaying a visa, as on par with a much more serious crime than it really is. Routinely these actions are analogized to a bona-fide military invasion, or even to that of a burglar breaking into a house. "Illegal entry" or "unauthorized overstay" is neither of these in any meaningful sense.
It's not about the legalities of illegal immigration, otherwise you all would be more cognizant of the severity (or lack thereof) of how the law describes illegal immigration. It's almost as if the concept of illegal immigration is personally insulting to you on a deep emotional level, and that is why you irrationally overreact.
This guy is one of the least worthy people to be deported. He isn't some welfare moocher, he is a European, he has a job and a family. But no.
He waited 16 YEARS after he overstayed his visa. And he has a deportation order.
And if illegal entry is no big deal, then by default, the due process afforded to it is going to be much less than a criminal charge.
Fuck him. He committed identity fraud for over a decade. I'd be OK with them just summarily offing him, if that would make you happier.
And do you realize your complaint that we want to remove a European effectively kills your oft-repeated "THIS BE RAYCIZM FOR REAL!" bullshit?