The long-running battle for American citizenship has reached a heartbreaking conclusion for Paul Canton, a Marine Corps veteran who served honorably from 1991 to 1998, despite spending 35 years in the United States and raising a family in Central Florida. A federal judge’s ruling in February 2026 has cleared the way for his deportation. The decision marks the final chapter in a decade-long legal struggle that began when a simple driver’s license renewal revealed that the veteran, who believed he was a citizen, was actually undocumented.
A Legal Technicality and the ‘Shove Through the Crack’
Canton’s predicament is grounded in a complex legal technicality regarding his dates of service. Although he enlisted on March 29, 1991, during a designated period of hostility, the court ruled that he did not qualify for expedited citizenship because he did not enter active duty until after the official end of Operation Desert Storm. This minor timing issue, combined with a recruiter’s “hollow promise” that citizenship would be automatic upon honorable discharge, left Canton in a legal limbo for nearly three decades.

The situation was further complicated by Canton’s own civic participation. Believing he was a citizen, he registered to vote and cast ballots in multiple elections. Under current U.S. immigration law, the act of voting as a non-citizen is considered a permanent bar to naturalization. This legal roadblock prevented him from seeking sponsorship through his American-born wife or children, effectively sealing his fate despite having no criminal record and receiving support from high-ranking officials like Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
The Human Cost of Statelessness
As Canton prepares to leave the only home he has known since his teenage years, the human cost of the deportation order is becoming starkly visible. His family in Marion County is currently selling their home and preparing for a future without him. “My oldest boy is going to empty out the house and sell it,” Canton said. “And that’s the end of my time in America. Because I can’t come back.”
The deportation is especially complicated by the fact that Canton may technically be stateless. Born in New Zealand but raised in Australia, his attorney, Elizabeth Ricci, notes that his Australian citizenship was stripped when he joined the U.S. Marines. This leaves the veteran with nowhere to officially call home. While Republican and Democratic leaders have called for a “softer touch” in veteran immigration cases, Canton’s only remaining hope lies in a special act of Congress or a direct intervention by President Trump.
















