Escaped IRA prisoner fights deportation

An escaped IRA prisoner who has lived in immigration limbo for 25 years in California may see it all unravel from inside a South Texas federal detention centre this week.

An escaped IRA prisoner who has lived in immigration limbo for 25 years in California may see it all unravel from inside a South Texas federal detention centre this week.

Pol Brennan, a convicted member of the IRA who escaped from the Maze prison in Belfast, was arrested with an expired work permit in South Texas in January.

He has been detained ever since, awaiting a hearing on Wednesday and Thursday on whether he’ll finally earn legal residency or be deported to the North.

Brennan’s situation is so muddied that questions of why he would be deported now after 25 years are balanced by the marvel that he was not sent home years ago for sneaking into the country under an assumed name. He had brushes with the law in the US before his arrest in Texas, but was able to renew work permits without becoming a permanent legal resident.

Since arriving in the US, Brennan married and worked as a master carpenter, bought a gun under an assumed name, once applied for a passport, also with an assumed name, and was convicted of assault for scuffling with a contractor who he claimed owed him money.

Immigration officials won’t comment on his case, citing the forthcoming hearing. But Brennan’s case has drawn attention, especially within the Irish-American community.

Brennan was caught with an expired work permit in January while he and his wife, Joanna Volz, were driving to Austin from South Padre Island, where they had visited Volz’s mother.

US Border Patrol agents at the Sarita checkpoint ran Brennan through the computer and found: his conviction and 16-year prison sentence in 1977 in Belfast for possession of explosives; the 1983 escape from the maximum security Maze Prison with 37 others; and his 1993 arrest by the FBI in Berkeley, California, after he had applied for a passport using an assumed name.

“They started getting really agitated and excited,” Brennan said from the Willacy County Detention Centre. “Like they were on to something. It was kind of comical.”

Two days later Border Patrol announced its agents had captured an international fugitive. But Brennan had lived in the San Francisco Bay Area since 1984, and his wife said he hadn’t been hard to find.

“If I was an FBI agent (looking for Brennan and other Maze escapees) I would just go to a big Irish bar and look for who never had to buy his drinks,” Volz said.

Brennan’s 1993 arrest kicked off what became a seven-year fight against extradition. It ended when Britain dropped its extradition request, citing the North's 1998 Good Friday accord, which called for the accelerated release of the conflict’s political prisoners.

Ever since, Brennan and about 15 other former IRA prisoners, who made their home in the US, have lived in a legal limbo. Even though they entered the country illegally, they can renew their work permits but have not been able to get permanent immigration status. Brennan’s requests for political asylum and a green card are pending.

At his hearing this week, Brennan plans to argue that the extradition would cause hardship for his wife and that he could face potentially violent grudges in the North.

more courts articles

Former prisoner given indefinite hospital order for killing Irishman in London Former prisoner given indefinite hospital order for killing Irishman in London
Jack Grealish landed with £1,042 bill after admitting speeding in Range Rover Jack Grealish landed with £1,042 bill after admitting speeding in Range Rover
Man admits killing Irish pensioner (87) on mobility scooter in London Man admits killing Irish pensioner (87) on mobility scooter in London

More in this section

Bambie Thug Bambie Thug: ‘Life is forever changed’ after Eurovision
Cork v Limerick - Munster GAA Hurling Senior Championship Round 3 GAA 'losing spectators' over paywalled games, warns minister
Fearful Mercy University Hospital staff now carry alarms Fearful Mercy University Hospital staff now carry alarms
War_map
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited