Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is hilarious so many people were rallying around this Irish guy who has a warrant out for his arrest in Ireland.
His local hometown paper has at least three articles about him:
Tue 15 Apr 2008 at 16:11
Article Title: Man was drunk
A man arrested drunk for his own safety appeared sober before Donnchadh O Buachalla in New Ross District Court last week. Seamus Culleton from Kilbride, Glenmore was picked up for his own safety by Garda Edward Barry who came across him at 12.35 a.m. on O'Hanrahan Bridge on July 23 last year. The apprentice plasterer accepted that he was extremely drunk on the night in question and he was fined ?200.
The two other articles in the New Ross Standard details
This is hilarious so many people were rallying around this Irish guy who has a warrant out for his arrest in Ireland.
His local hometown paper has at least three articles about him:
This is hilarious so many people were rallying around this Irish guy who has a warrant out for his arrest in Ireland.
His local hometown paper has at least three articles about him:
Tue 15 Apr 2008 at 16:11
Article Title: Man was drunk
A man arrested drunk for his own safety appeared sober before Donnchadh O Buachalla in New Ross District Court last week. Seamus Culleton from Kilbride, Glenmore was picked up for his own safety by Garda Edward Barry who came across him at 12.35 a.m. on O'Hanrahan Bridge on July 23 last year. The apprentice plasterer accepted that he was extremely drunk on the night in question and he was fined ?200.
The other two articles include:
September 30 2007 bench warrant for criminal damage
May 17, 2008 warrant for unlawful possession of drugs, possession for sale or supply, & obstruction.
Additionally, people from his hometown are writing that he had a partner and twins who he abandoned when he fled to the United States.
I want to know if his wife is going to still be supporting him. Well, that is if she really is truly his wife and not someone he paid to get a green card.
You’re just trying to use side issues to distract from the fact that ICE is putting people who haven’t had any kind of orderly judicial review in concentration camps, without any regular independent oversight.
Nope. I am pointing out that the white guy who has a warrant out for his arrest for being a drug dealer, who in an interview disparaged Latinos migrants in custody as well as other migrants who don't speak English AND who doesn't have the right to judicial review because he entered on a Tourist Visa was the becoming the poster boy for ICE atrocities. If the conditions are horrific why aren't reporters covering this camp. Why aren't reporters trying to interview other migrants there to find a compelling story and give it media time? But of course the story is going to end, so to bad so sad to all the brown people in custody. All the media time he has sucked up is gross.
He isn't a credible AND he doesn't have a right to judicial review since he came on a tourist visa AND he has the opportunity to legally work in:
EU Countries (27 countries): Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Republic of Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and Sweden.
EEA & Other Countries: Due to separate agreements, Irish citizens can also work in the European Economic Area (EEA) countries—Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway—as well as Switzerland.
The UK: Under the Common Travel Area (CTA) agreement, Irish citizens can also live and work in the United Kingdom.
Additionally, when you enter on a visa waiver you give up your rights to judicial review.
If you enter the United States under the Visa Waiver Program, you are not permitted to change status in the United States.
If you enter the United States under the Visa Waiver Program, you are not permitted to extend your stay in the United States beyond the initial admission period. You must depart the United States on or before the date on your admission stamp when you entered the United States.
1) An alien who has been admitted to the United States under the provisions of section 217 of the Act [Visa Waiver Program]and of this part who is determined by an immigration officer to be deportable from the United States under one or more of the grounds of deportability listed in section 237 of the Act shall be removed from the United States to his or her country of nationality or last residence. Such removal shall be determined by the district director who has jurisdiction over the place where the alien is found,
and shall be effected without referral of the alien to an immigration judge for a determination of deportability, except that an alien who was admitted as a Visa Waiver Program visitor who applies for asylum in the United States must be issued a Form I-863 for a proceeding in accordance with 8 CFR 208.2(c)(1) and (c)(2).