For more than two decades, he built his life on the steady rhythm of work and family in the United States. From running a small plastering business to quiet evenings at home with his wife, a U.S. citizen, his days were woven into routines that defined belonging. But one ordinary day, that rhythm broke, and a routine drive home became the start of a long, uncertain passage through a system that would hold him far from his life and loved ones.
Seamus Culleton, originally from Ireland, was stopped by immigration authorities while carrying a valid work permit and legal documentation tied to his ongoing green card application. Despite having no criminal record and being married to a U.S. citizen, he was taken into ICE custody.
What followed was nearly five months in detention across multiple facilities, ultimately in Texas. Culleton described the conditions as grim and demoralizing — crowded dormitories, bleak cells, limited access to fresh air, and basic meals. He likened the environment to something he never expected to encounter in a country he considered home.
Efforts to secure his release became tangled in legal hurdles. Although a judge approved a bond, his freedom did not come. Attorneys reported that the government denied his release without clear explanation and later cited papers he allegedly signed agreeing to deportation — something Culleton emphatically denies.
Through it all, his life has been paused. Important appointments in his green card process could not take place, leaving his future unresolved. His family spoke of heartbreak and anxiety, while legal representatives urged fair treatment for a man who has lived and contributed to his community for years.
The case underscores tensions within an immigration system that can hold long-term residents with clear legal ties despite their record of lawfulness. What should have been a procedural step toward permanent residency instead became prolonged detention, raising questions about discretion, fairness, and the meaning of lawful status.
In quiet moments between filings and court dates, the life he built waits. And with it, a family’s hope that one day, the walls of detention will no longer stand between a man and the home he helped create.
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Sources
The Guardian The Irish Times Newsweek Daily Beast

