Podcst

Episode 1: The Lens

Out of the Valley’s Shadow

Aziz Saad

February 22, 2026

Show Notes

What does an immigration final hearing actually look like? No jury. No dramatic courtroom speeches. No criminal conviction. Just a screen, a government file, and a decision that determines whether you go home or are removed from the country. In this premiere episode of Out of the Valley’s Shadow, Adam Saad recounts his experience spending nine months in U.S. immigration detention without a criminal charge, culminating in a final hearing conducted through video conference. This episode explores: • What immigration detention is really like • The difference between criminal court and immigration court • How due process works inside removal proceedings • The psychological impact of prolonged detention • The strain immigration cases place on relationships and families • How bureaucratic language can quietly reshape a life Through restrained storytelling and first person reflection, Adam takes listeners inside a detention facility, inside a virtual courtroom, and inside the mental discipline required when everything depends on how you are perceived through a lens. At stake is not only legal status, but identity, love, and the future he built with Aspen, the woman waiting outside. This is not a political rant. It is not a legal lecture. It is a firsthand account of what happens when freedom becomes procedural. If you are interested in: Immigration law Asylum and removal defense ICE detention centers Immigration court hearings Human resilience under pressure Love during incarceration Stories of due process in America This series is for you. Out of the Valley’s Shadow is based on real events. Subscribe and follow for new episodes exploring immigration detention, legal strategy, identity, and the quiet fight to remain.
Episode 1: The Lens — Podcst